English

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Etymology

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From kick +‎ -able.

Adjective

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kickable (comparative more kickable, superlative most kickable)

  1. Capable or deserving of being kicked.
    The home side were showing adventure, running from deep in their own half and booting a kickable penalty to touch.
    • 1647, Theodore de la Guard [pseudonym; Nathaniel Ward], The Simple Cobler of Aggawam in America. [], London: [] J[ohn] D[ever] & R[obert] I[bbitson] for Stephen Bowtell, [], →OCLC, pages 24–25:
      I look at her as the very gizzard of a trifle, [] fitter to be kickt, if ſhee vvere of a kickable ſubſtance, than either honoured or humoured.
    • 1842, Alexander Campbell, “Kickable People”, in Sketches of Life and Character[1], page 10:
      Kickable people are of various descriptions. Amongst these are your kickable subjects prima facie;—those whose provocatives are visible and external, whose incentives to you to kick them lie chiefly in manner and bearing.
    • 1950 October, John W. Wood, “The World's favorite Sport”, in Popular Mechanics[2], volume 94, number 4, Hearst Magazines, →ISSN, page 137:
      All sorts of kickable objects were used from ancient times until today's inflated ball, with a leather casing between 27 and 28 inches in circumference, was adopted.
    • 1997, “By The Seat Of His Pants”, in Ski[3], volume 61, number 7, →ISSN, page 22:
      The weekend inventor has five U.S. patents and three more pending for inspirations such as a kickable Frisbee, a clothes-ironing mitt and a leak-proof shower curtain.
  2. (describing a behaviour or trait) Incurring kicking.
    • 1842, Alexander Campbell, “Kickable People”, in Sketches of Life and Character[4], page 11:
      Insolence of office is pre-eminently kickable. Who ever went into a public office, and was treated, as he is very apt to be, with the most offensive hauteur by some saucy, well-paid official, without feeling the desire to kick him rising strong within him? [] Petty tyranny is also eminently kickable.
    • 1860, Augustus Mayhew, “The Finest Girl in Bloomsbury. A Tale of Ambitious Love. [serial novel, Chapter IX: Mrs. Ickle's Triumph]”, in The Welcome Guest[5], London: Houlston and Wright, page 464:
      The first serious outbreak and renewal of hostilites [sic] occurred when Dolly—who was now out of the doctor's hands—one morning sent his footman off at a moment's notice, for gross impertinence of the severest kickable kind.
    • 1923, Rachel Crothers, “Act III”, in Mary the Third[:] A Comedy in Prologue and Three Acts:
      What if the very things you like in me now—you'd hate sometime. What if the things I think are strong and stunning in you now, I'd think were pig-headed and kickable after a while?