English edit

Noun edit

hiccory (plural hiccories)

  1. Archaic spelling of hickory.
    • [1853], J[ohn] Benwell, chapter V, in An Englishman’s Travels in America: His Observations of Life and Manners in the Free and Slave States, London: Binns and Goodwin, [], →OCLC, pages 157–158:
      [] as we rode on, we saw gigantic pine, cedar, and hiccory trees, torn up by the roots, and scattered over the surrounding country, by by-gone hurricanes, many of them hundreds of yards from the spot that nurtured their roots—while the gnarled branches lying across our track, scorched black with the lightning, or from long exposure to a burning sun, impeded our advance, and made the journey anything but pleasant.
    • 1843, Frederick Marryat, Monsieur Violet[1]:
      There the oak and hiccory grow tall and beautiful, but the general appearance of the country is poor, broken, and rugged.

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