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  1. HICK Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of HICK is an unsophisticated person with local or restricted interests or outlook. How to use hick in a sentence.

  2. HICK | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

    Hick says that when all suffering is attributable to the activity of a just providence, no room is left for genuine human compassion.

  3. HICK definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

    If you refer to someone as a hick, you are saying in a rude way that you think they are uneducated and stupid because they come from the countryside.

  4. Hick (film) - Wikipedia

    Hick is a 2011 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film directed by Derick Martini from a screenplay by Andrea Portes, based on Portes' 2007 novel of the same name.

  5. hick - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

    Sep 11, 2025 · hick (third-person singular simple present hicks, present participle hicking, simple past and past participle hicked) To hiccup.

  6. Hick (2011) - IMDb

    Hick: Directed by Derick Martini. With Chloë Grace Moretz, Blake Lively, Rory Culkin, Christopher Coakley. A Nebraska teen gets more than she bargained for when she sets out for the bright lights of …

  7. HICK Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com

    HICK definition: an unsophisticated, boorish, and provincial person; rube. See examples of hick used in a sentence.

  8. Hick - definition of hick by The Free Dictionary

    A person regarded as unsophisticated, gullible, or coarse from having lived in the country: "New Yorkers had a horrid way of making people feel like hicks" (Louis Auchincloss). Provincial; unsophisticated: a …

  9. hick - WordReference.com Dictionary of English

    hick (hik), n. an unsophisticated, boorish, and provincial person; rube. adj. pertaining to or characteristic of hicks: hick ideas. located in a rural or culturally unsophisticated area: a hick town.

  10. Hick Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary

    HICK meaning: an uneducated person from a small town or the country often used before another noun