English edit

Adjective edit

brickety (comparative more brickety, superlative most brickety)

  1. (Southern US, dated) fidgety, meddlesome
    • 1872, Harriet Hernandes questioned by Philadelph Van Trump, Congressional Series of United States Public Documents, page 590:
      Question. They must be a brickety family, if both the boys are brickety?
      Answer. They are all brickety.
    • 1887, William Eleazar Barton, The Wind-up of the Big Meetin' on No Bus'ness:
      "Lindy's a mighty fine gal," he soliloquized, "but she's mighty feisty by spells. Suthin' 'r nuther has got her to feelin' brickety, an' she's just a devilin' me for a spell."
    • 1917, Edward Jewitt Wheeler, Isaac Kaufman Funk, William Seaver Woods, Arthur Stimson Draper, Wilfred John Funk, The Literary Digest:
      “Air you one of them brickety doctors that don't aim to let any one help a sufi'erin' human out 'cause they think they knows it all?" she demanded.

See also edit