dickishly
English
Etymology
dickish + -ly
Adverb
dickishly (comparative more dickishly, superlative most dickishly)
- (slang, vulgar) In a dickish manner.
- 2011, Rick Huffman, The Last Night of Exile, AuthorHouse (2011), →ISBN, page 211:
- "Just hope," Eric continues, "that he's not tempting fate's dickishly ironic sense of humor."
- 2012, Adele Griffin, All You Never Wanted, Alfred A. Knopf (2012), →ISBN, page 58:
- Thwop! The heel of Joshua's hand cuffed me hard and mean behind the ear. Like I was a dog. He hadn't even taken his eyes off the road. "What the hell?"
- "I said the get. Not the gift. The get. Who said I was buying anyting?"
- "For God's sake, could you be more dickishly white trash about it? Hitting me? Are you for real? That hurt, Gunner."
- 2014, David Mitchell, Thinking About It Only Makes It Worse: And Other Lessons from Modern Life, Guardian Books (2014), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
- Being dickishly flippant is one of the joys of student life.
- 2011, Rick Huffman, The Last Night of Exile, AuthorHouse (2011), →ISBN, page 211: