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"hick" Definitions
  1. connected with people from the country who are considered to be stupid and to have little experience of life

109 Sentences With "hick"

How to use hick in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "hick" and check conjugation/comparative form for "hick". Mastering all the usages of "hick" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In "Eleanor and Hick" Susan Quinn focuses on the first lady's relationship with Lorena Hickok (known as Hick), a journalist with the Associated Press.
She's angry and confused, another hick who's not with it.
Eleanor and Hick: The Love Affair That Shaped a First Lady.
Hard-charging yet fragile, Hick drew out the emotionally reserved Roosevelt.
Mr Hick could not adapt his game to more testing conditions.
They join Beto, Eric, Hick, Jay, Seth, Bill, Kirsten, and Tim.
You sound like a hick from the sticks that doesn't know anything.
He's a hick from the rural hinterland who is resentful of the
Having enough supplies, particularly N95 respirators, is also a concern, Hick said.
Hick sees through Franklin's manipulations, yet is in awe of him nevertheless.
At Cedar Falls High School, she only heard "English and hick," she says.
This is a shame, since much in McNees's characterization of Hick is lively.
As Hick puts it, "Eleanor's body is the landscape of my true home."
Controlling humidity within the structure was a main task for the designers, Hick explained.
"Snap the Whip" (1872) looks like work made by a provincial hick — not a Frenchman.
The self-described "hick-hop" rapper then auctioned off the damaged artworks over social media.
"It's just distasteful, it's low class, it's hick," Mr. Karklins said of the president's tactics.
" When rural American moviegoers rebuffed films with bucolic themes, it declared, "Stix Nix Hick Pix.
A big draw was Graeme Hick, a Zimbabwe-born batsman and a relentless runmaker for Worcestershire.
"Cousin Clem is a hick, but he's not stupid," Mr. Tapp once said of his creation.
Only a huckster and a hick: one to be ridiculed, and the other to be refuted.
Assigned to cover the first lady, Hick fell in love instead, and Eleanor seems to have reciprocated.
"Hick told her friend Helen Douglas she would want to die once Eleanor Roosevelt died," writes Quinn.
"This is bigger than us," Hick is told, as Eleanor urges their separation for the greater good.
The writer is the author of "Eleanor and Hick: The Love Affair That Shaped a First Lady."
In cricket-mad India, a parallel might be drawn between Mr Hick and Narendra Modi, the prime minister.
I'm not wild about you either, though not because you're a hick who won't do as I say.
"This was a situation which... involved no personal gain on the appellants' part," Judge Chao Hick Tin said.
John Hickenlooper's last name, which he says means "hedge-hopper" in Dutch, is pronounced Hick-enn-loop-her.Sen.
She could not have been "Eleanor everywhere," tolerating Franklin's wanderings, if she hadn't had Hick somewhere for herself.
I felt powerless, a hopeless bumbler and hick by dint of my own lack of cool at Georgetown dinners.
Until now, most of Jelly's music videos have found hick-hop's sweetest-sounding crooner not taking himself too seriously.
Every now and then a poor hick gets shot carrying a backpack of dope along a winding mountain trail.
To make matters worse, this seeming hick — Grant Wood (1891–1942) — quickly and cannily capitalized on this popular success.
Shawn Hick, a seventh-grade teacher in Lillington, N.C., could be heard in the video justifying being outside to film.
Handler has not only called Sanders a "trollop," but has portrayed her as a hick who is just plain dumb.
But Hick, as she was called, fell in love with her subject, and at least for a time Eleanor reciprocated.
"For the most part, FDR felt the same way about Hick that he did about Eleanor's other women friends," writes Quinn.
"Some people write me off as a bit of a hick from an Essex council estate, I realize that," he said.
Last week, the longtime Trump confidant Roger Stone trashed Sessions as an "insubordinate hillbilly" — expressing a double dose of hick hatred.
So Hick makes only brief appearances in Ms Cook's final volume, despite living in the White House during much of the war.
Realizing she couldn't cover someone she had feelings for, Hick resigned from the A.P. and all but moved into the White House.
By the end, McNees has consigned Hick to the familiar role of the lonely lesbian, thwarted and excluded by the straight world.
If there is a single person who exemplifies the dumbass hick in the smug imagination, it is former President George W. Bush.
"Leaving the EU will make it much more difficult to attract the brightest and best," said James Hick, managing director of ManpowerGroup Solutions.
I don&apost like the media coming in now and almost in glee that there was a hick up towards peace-- GUTFELD: Right.
McDonagh writes Dixon as a hick and a loser who still lives with his verbally abusive mother and almost failed out of school.
Hick comforts Eleanor not just for the loss of Franklin but for the revelation that his mistress was with him at the end.
" Cornelius is explaining to his naïve fellow employee, Barnaby, that beyond "this hick town" where they labor so joylessly is "a slick town.
" Searching for a way out of her penniless life but full of doubt, Samantha asks her, "What if they think I'm just a hick?
"[Eleanor] told Hick how unloved she felt in her marriage and how disappointed she was in the 'great man' everyone else idolized," writes Quinn.
Often mockingly referred to as "hick-hop," country rap is a hybrid of its two namesakes, genres that at first blush are polar opposites.
Hick did as well; but in choosing Eleanor, she had stepped off the ladder of her career, and she never regained her professional footing.
That's a main concern for John Hick, medical director of emergency preparedness for Minneapolis-based Hennepin Healthcare, which is already contending with flu season.
With examples like this in mind, people regularly write off hick-hop as a lowbrow gimmick that conflates two genres that shouldn't share studio time.
"The rest of us all get a percentage of what we usually order, but that doesn't begin to keep up with what is required," Hick said.
The character is also a cartoonist's loving nod to hick comic-strip staples like Al Capp's Li'l Abner, Snuffy Smith and Frederick Opper's Maud the mule.
"I was a hick, born to the barren, rocky soil of the Ottawa Valley, where the richest man in town was the barber," Mr. Macdonald writes.
In the White House fishbowl, the press constantly hounded her, and vicious gossips mocked her unflattering gowns, portraying her as a Confederate spy or a Western hick.
A day later a super PAC known as the 314 Action Fund rolled out a "Draft Hick for Senate" campaign and released polling showing Hickenlooper leading Sen.
Caipira is the Brazilian Portuguese equivalent to a redneck or hick, a pejorative term for a rural individual often assumed to be uneducated, uncultured, and generally ignorant.
"Eleanor and Hick" may not have the heft and depth of Blanche Wiesen Cook's monumental Eleanor Roosevelt biography (whose third and final volume will be published next month).
Hick said that a predicted shrinking of jobs in the U.K. banking world are in part due to technological innovation, where humans are being replaced by automated processes.
As a boy, Williams, who described his birthplace, Blue Diamond, Kentucky, as a "little old country hick town in coal-mining territory," regularly visited its segregated movie theater.
For example, Rarriwuy Hick plays Latani, a teenage girl whose small sister is killed and mother sold into prostitution after they try to leave the zone for safer housing.
I was happy to find out about it, but I also felt like the equivalent of a hick: nervous and excited to meet the artists of the big city.
Body/Origin Descriptors: There used to be some pretty creative nicknames of this variety: the Hick from French Lick, the Round Mound of Rebound, Wilt the Stilt, the Big Fundamental.
Country music is already infusing a lot of the elements of hip-hop (don't get me started on hick hop) that Renea plays with, they're just doing it more ham-fistedly.
Only locally could I be a savvy cosmopolite; out in the vastness of the country, adrift and at large, every American was a hick, with the undisguisable emotions of a hick, as defenseless as even a sophisticated littérateur like Benét was against the pleasurable sort of sentiment aroused by the mere mention of Spartanburg, Santa Cruz, or the Nantucket Light, as well as unassuming Skunktown Plain, or Lost Mule Flat, or the titillatingly named Little French Lick.
"Honestly I've cried three times already from some of the hateful messages I've received, telling me my daughter should be taken or that I'm just an uneducated lowlife hick," she wrote online.
Even so, we see the tired caricatures all the time: the ignorant sheriff whose vowels stretch from here to Mississippi, the illiterate hick whose grammar is almost as rotten as his teeth.
Eleanor's emotionally distant mother had called her "Granny" as a child because she was so serious; Hick had been beaten by her father and the family moved constantly to try to escape poverty.
This painting you had made in the hick town of Modena, the rich little provincial center up river, up the Po, where they invited you to have your first one man show ever.
In Susan Quinn's book, Eleanor and Hick: The Love Affair That Shaped a First Lady, Quinn reveals details from the more than 3,300 letters Eleanor and reporter Lorena Hickok exchanged over 30 years.
My dad worked in housekeeping, which enabled us to afford for my sister and me to go there, and I always felt like sort of an art hick caught between the two identities.
Larry Bird was the "Hick From French Lick," in Indiana; LeBron James might as well have just walked off a factory line, so completely defined is he by his Rust Belt Ohio roots.
She sets out not only to bust stereotypes about submissive Japanese-American women but also to rescue hick Kentuckians, intolerant Christians, "tiger moms" and even the dying from the broad brush of caricature.
This is the hipster racist Clemmons speaks of, and I'll speak for the majority of black folks in saying that we dislike you almost more than the hick that brandishes "nigga" like a sword.
Screenshot via YouTube Jelly Roll's most recent album, Sobriety Sucks, would seem to imply that he's made some tough decisions to quit the daily vices that a hick-hop rapper should be forced to uphold.
Taking aim at Graeme Hick in the heat of battle after the England batsman had failed to connect with a number of balls, Hughes stopped to offer his opponent some advice during the 2180 series.
McNees's "Undiscovered Country" unfolds more straightforwardly and in a narrower time frame, opening with Hick interviewing the candidate's wife in the fall of 1932 and with its final chapter closing at the end of 1933.
Normal People has Marianne falling in with a rich crowd at Trinity, the sort of kids who will end up running Ireland in the future, who call Connell, their intellectual equal, a "culchie," or a hick.
Nelson's the kind of character actor who has built his career playing vaguely menacing hillbillies, but under Cretton's humane gaze, Nelson is able to make Myers into far more than a racist hick, and he's unforgettable.
Mr. Reed, a self-professed "hick-talking Arkansawyer" who worked for The Times from 21986 until 20123, spending much of that time crisscrossing the American South, died on Sunday night at a hospital in Fayetteville, Ark.
Personally, I'm a shoo-in reader for anything Roosevelt (one of my kids is in part named after T.R.; another after Eleanor), so the book I'm most looking forward to is "Eleanor and Hick," by Susan Quinn.
I am seeing, I am SEEING something coming to life, something rolling, like a great V-HICK-LE over this great Sea To Shining, and it's green lines, endless, children of a lesser monetary system, endless green lines!
One of the most significant of these was the A.P. journalist Lorena Hickok (known as Hick), who left her job after becoming too close to her subject, worked for the Roosevelt administration and later lived at the White House.
"White Houses" is scattered with colorful period references — to, say, the Lindbergh baby's kidnapping (covered for The A.P. by Hick) and Wallis Simpson ("famous for kissing up, and kicking down") — but Bloom employs her research with a light touch.
"He comes in, this big goofy guy with a small drum kit, and Alex and I thought he was a hick from the country," the Rush frontman Geddy Lee recalled in The Guardian of Peart's tryout for the band.
Built by its elite members to convince visitors to the 1893 Chicago World's Fair that this wasn't a hick town, the elegant Chicago Athletic Association languished in recent decades, notable for its Venetian Gothic facade on a landmarked stretch of Michigan Avenue.
In July 1933, just a few months after her husband took office, Eleanor and Hick set out for a vacation in New England and Canada, driving off in Eleanor's sporty blue convertible, unaccompanied by the Secret Service, staying together in hotels and farmhouses.
Far from being Franklin's rival, Hick is an enabler and an ally, turning in reports from across the nation on the impact of the Depression and helping Franklin manage at least one of his mistresses, Missy LeHand, after she suffers a stroke.
In August 1992, the man nicknamed Larry Legend and the Hick from French Lick, a reference to his Indiana hometown, retired as a player but remained with the Celtics as a special assistant until the Pacers offered him their head-coaching position in 1997.
I've described my paternal grandfather as a man who "grilled armadillo roadkill" to suggest he was a Southern hick, and it's true he liked armadillo and at least occasionally foraged killed ones — but he was also the head of the archaeology department at the University of Florida.
If the main characters on the show fall into the "hick" category of Letterkenny's population (as some intros for the show state, "Letterkenny consists of hicks, skids (the druggies), hockey players, and Christians") the show makes a point to illustrate their smarts with extended silly wordplay.
Ever since Petey Pablo had us twisting our shirts round our hands and spinning them like a helicopter as he rapped about raising up and puttin' it down for all the little bitty overlooked hick towns, the state has produced an impressive array of hip-hop talent.
Jochen Hick, der 2003 für seinen Dokumentarfilm Allein unter Heteros mit dem Teddy-Award der Berlinale ausgezeichnet wurde, erzählt in seinem neuesten Werk Mein wunderbares West-Berlin auf sehr ehrliche und ergreifende Weise, wie schwule Männer im West-Berlin nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg bis zum Mauerfall gelebt haben.
"In July 1933, just a few months after her husband took office, Eleanor and Hick set out for a vacation in New England and Canada, driving off in Eleanor's sporty blue convertible, unaccompanied by the Secret Service, staying together in hotels and farmhouses," Sylvia Brownrigg notes in her review.
The star of Robert Altman's Thieves Like Us—a spare, beautifully realized depiction of hick bank robbers in the Depression—Shelley got her first break four years ago at age 20 when she stumbled onto an Altman location in her native Houston, trying to hustle some of her husband's sketches.
"We do ourselves a real disservice — those of us on the left, those of us who see Trump as an anathema — to look at everybody who voted for him as an ideologue, a true believer, as a hick or a rube or somehow beneath us," Bourdain told Travel and Leisure.
To understand Duterte and his supporters, one must look at the full range of issues that appeal to Filipinos, most of whom don't see Duterte as a hick who made a successful grab for power but instead see a shrewd manipulator of the entrenched Philippine power structures: dangerous, volatile, and uncompromising, maybe, but not stupid.
If such a thing existed, they wanted nothing of it: According to the Twitter crowd, the human equivalent of the predominant German culture is a xenophobic, homophobic, ignorant hick who eats nothing but eggs and potatoes and spinach, even abroad, proudly displaying his "Piefigkeit," his petty-bourgeois small-mindedness, to the embarrassed global community.
Among the others are Blanche Wiesen Cook's "Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume 3: The War Years and After, 1939-1962"; "His Final Battle: The Last Months of Franklin Roosevelt," by Joseph Lelyveld; "Eleanor and Hick: The Love Affair That Shaped a First Lady," by Susan Quinn; and "FDR on His Houseboat: The Larooco Log, 1924-1926," edited by Karen Chase.
I was told I had to confirm right then and there, as I was out in the middle of nowhere, with hardly any cell phone reception, dressed like a hick in oversized clothing to make me look like a typical Palmdale, CA resident while having a shotgun pointed at my head on camera for a good part of the day.
When the top-grade coke appears — but impresses only a helpless young hick of a writer, not the older, wiser Russell — and is described as being exquisitely blue, Russell is obsessed enough to recall that when the gossip columnist Sheilah Graham wrote a memoir about her romance with Fitzgerald, she seemed to describe him as looking blue a lot too.
But at around the same time, Houchins teamed up with Ford to form Average Joes Entertainment, a record label devoted to the intersection of country and rap centered on white rural experiences, with a growing stable of burly gool-ol'-boy rappers — "hick-hop," it was occasionally called — operating largely outside the country music mainstream, though Ford regularly collaborated with the genre's stars.
For our features, reporter and Thump contributor Dave Wedge investigates the recent allegations that Afrika Bambaataa—one of hip-hop's founding fathers—sexually abused teenagers during his heyday; Zach Goldbaum travels south to meet the white rappers who are trying to legitimize country rap (also known as hick-hop); and Noisey editor Kim Kelly writes about the religious fanatics in Russia who are trying to strong-arm metal bands into silence.
I am suggesting that they instead wonder what it might be like to have little left but one's values; to wake up one day to find your whole moral order destroyed; to look around and see the representatives of a new order call you a stupid, hypocritical hick without bothering, even, to wonder how your corner of your poor state found itself so alienated from them in the first place.
The many Canadian redneck jokes in this inexplicable action-adventure fantasy starring a pickup-driving, beer-guzzling hick named Rowsdower all culminate in one wonderful song about this nation's ongoing beef with our neighbor to the north: And if that weren't enough, Rowsdower ends up with his own theme song in the closing credits, here edited into a fittingly Rowsdower-filled fanvid: Say what you will about Werewolf (episode 904), but the music's actually not terrible — and it's instantly made 3000 times better by the tour de force musical accompaniment Mike and the bots give it in the closing credits.

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