kick

verb
/kɪk/

Etymology

From Middle English kyken (“to strike out with the foot”), from Old Norse kikna (“to sink at the knees”) and keikja (“to bend backwards”) (compare Old Norse keikr (“bent backwards, the belly jutting forward”)), from Proto-Germanic *kaikaz (“bent backwards”), of uncertain origin. Perhaps from Proto-Germanic *kī-, *kij- (“to split, dodge, swerve sidewards”), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵeyH- (“to sprout, shoot”). Compare also Dutch kijken (“to look”), Middle Low German kīken (“to look, watch”). See keek.

  1. derived from *ǵeyH- — “to sprout, shoot
  2. derived from *kī-
  3. derived from *kaikaz — “bent backwards
  4. derived from kikna — “to sink at the knees
  5. inherited from kyken — “to strike out with the foot

Definitions

  1. To strike or hit with the foot or other extremity of the leg.

    • Did you kick your brother?
    • 1895, George MacDonald, Lilith, Chapter XII: Friends and Foes, I was cuffed by the women and kicked by the men because I would not swallow it.
    • A punt is made by letting the ball drop from the hands and kicking it just before it touches the ground.
  2. To make a sharp jerking movement of the leg, as to strike something.

    • He enjoyed the simple pleasure of watching the kickline kick.
    • Sometimes we had rather rough play, for they would frequently bite and kick as well as gallop.
    • 1904, Stratemeyer Syndicate, The Bobbsey Twins, Chapter II: Rope Jumping, and What Followed, "If you did that, I'd kick," answered Freddie, and began to kick real hard into the air.
  3. To direct to a particular place by a blow with the foot or leg.

    • Kick the ball into the goal.
    • Sometimes he can kick the ball forward along the ground until it is kicked in goal, where he can fall on it for a touchdown.
  4. + 31 more definitions
    1. To eject summarily.

      • They are the ones who give hobbyists a bad name, and should be kicked out of any club meeting they show up at.
      • Dial 1-900-Mix-a-Lot and kick them nasty thoughts.
    2. To forcibly remove a participant from an online activity.

      • She was kicked from the IRC server for flooding.
    3. To overcome (a bothersome or difficult issue or obstacle)

      To overcome (a bothersome or difficult issue or obstacle); to free oneself of (a problem).

      • I still smoke, but they keep telling me to kick the habit.
    4. To move or push suddenly and violently.

      • He was kicked sideways by the force of the blast.
      • The back of the car kicked out violently, forcing me to steer into the slide and accelerate in order to maintain control.
    5. To recoil

      To recoil; to push by recoiling.

      • Lying on the ground, when fired, it kicked me back a foot. There was no way a person my size was going to be able to do an effective job with this gun.
      • I asked my sister Jeanette if she wanted to shoot the 12 ga. shotgun. She replied, "does it kick"?
    6. To attack (a piece) in order to force it to move.

    7. To accelerate quickly with a few pedal strokes in an effort to break away from other…

      To accelerate quickly with a few pedal strokes in an effort to break away from other riders.

      • Contador kicks again to try to rid himself of Rasmussen.
    8. To show opposition or resistance.

      • "My expenses always are reasonable—I mean there is always a reason for them. But I notice that you don't kick at the other item. That doesn't look as if you were exactly optimistic of striking a gold mine, Joolby."
    9. Of an engine, to engage

      Of an engine, to engage; to start.

      • The grey Bentley convertible, the 1933 4½-litre with the Amherst-Villiers supercharger, had been brought round a few minutes earlier from the garage where he kept it and the engine had kicked directly he pressed the self-starter.
    10. To work a press by impact of the foot on a treadle.

    11. To reset (a watchdog timer).

      • In the meantime, it is possible for the embedded software to “kick” the watchdog timer, to reset its counter to the original large number.
      • From now on the process has to periodically kick the watchdog timer in intervals shorter than the initialization interval.
    12. To reproach oneself for making a mistake or missing an opportunity.

      • He's still kicking himself for not investing three years ago.
    13. A hit or strike with the leg, foot or knee.

      • A kick to the knee.
      • A kick of his boot-heel sent the door flying into the room.
      • Elsad Zverotic gave Montenegro hope with a goal with the last kick of the first half - and when Rooney was deservedly shown red by referee Wolfgang Stark, England were placed under pressure they could not survive.
    14. The action of swinging a foot or leg.

      • The ballerina did a high kick and a leap.
    15. Something that tickles the fancy

      Something that tickles the fancy; something fun or amusing; a pleasure; a thrill.

      • I finally saw the show. What a kick!
      • I think I sprained something on my latest exercise kick.
      • get a kick out of
    16. The removal of a person from an online activity.

    17. The act of restarting or resetting a watchdog timer.

    18. Any bucking motion of an object that lacks legs or feet.

      • The car had a nasty kick the whole way.
      • The pool ball took a wild kick, up off the table.
    19. A pungent or spicy flavour

      A pungent or spicy flavour; piquancy.

      • Add a little cascabel pepper to ordinary tomato sauce to give it a kick.
      • For extra kick, hollow out a lime, float it on top of the drink, and fill it with tequila.
      • The first time I saw "Deep Water," the trace of mystery in the Crowhurst affair gave the movie a kick of excitement.
    20. A stimulation provided by an intoxicating substance.

    21. A pass played by kicking with the foot.

    22. The distance traveled by kicking the ball.

      • a long kick up the field.
    23. The recoil of a gun.

    24. A pocket.

      • Some nights I’d try my luck in the crap game and wind up with a grand or more in my kick.
      • Her mind couldn’t lose sight of […]the bloodied nickel plated pistol Angie had in his kick.
      • Swell shows all of ‘em, except this last one. […] Set me back two-seventy-five, including tax, and I wish I’d got it in my kick right now.
    25. An increase in speed in the final part of a running race.

    26. Synonym of kicker (“backlight positioned at an angle”).

    27. Sixpence.

      • Two and a kick—two shillings and a kick.
      • That's the stuff that will do the trick / Sold at every chemist for one and a kick
    28. A shoe.

      • All the other kids with the pumped up kicks / You better run, better run, outrun my gun
    29. Clipping of kickdrum

      Clipping of kickdrum; a 808.

    30. To die.

      • Who knows what will happen to his billions when the eighty-five-year-old kicks, but before he leaves the planet, Moon reportedly is hell-bent on creating a holy land in North Korea, dedicated to him.
    31. To be emphatically excellent.

      • That band really kicks.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at kick. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01kick02strike03sudden04hastily05hurriedly06hurried07hurry08quarterback09scrimmage10soccer

A definitional loop anchored at kick. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

10 hops · closes at kick

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA