kike
English
Etymology
Thought to be from Yiddish קײַקל (kaykl, “circle”). In the early 20th century, non-English-speaking Jews that immigrated to the United States would sign papers with a circle as opposed to a more common X. The latter symbol was associated by these Jews with the Christian cross, a symbol that, to them, represented millennia of persecution.[1] This is the dominant etymological theory, but there are others, in particular a contraction from the documented phrase ‘Ikey-Kikey’, an American-origin reduplication of Ikey, British-English pejorative for Jews after the prevalence of the name Isaac.[2]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kaɪk/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
- Rhymes: -aɪk
Noun
kike (plural kikes)
- (US, offensive, ethnic slur, religious slur) A Jew.
- 1922, Sinclair Lewis, “24”, in Babbitt:
- "Now you quit kidding me! What's the nice little name?" "Oh, it ain't so darn nice. I guess it's kind of kike. But my folks ain't kikes. My papa's papa was a nobleman in Poland, and there was a gentleman in here one day, he was kind of a count or something--"
- 2016 June 8, Tom Kludt, “New York Times editor quits Twitter over anti-Semitic tweets”, in CNN Business[3]:
- In one tweet, Weisman was referred to as a "kike." Another threatened to have him put "in the oven."
- 2019 February 2, “SPLC Kike Mark Potok Tracks America’s Declining White Population”, in Infostormer[4], archived from the original on 12 June 2025:
- Potok in case you don’t know, is a devious kike who works for the Southern Poverty Law Center which is a notorious anti-White hate group.
- (US, offensive) A miser; a contemptible, stingy person, particularly a well-endowed one.
- Synonym: see Thesaurus:miser
- That greedy kike would not give me any money when I was starving and needed food.
Derived terms
Descendants
- → Japanese: カイク
Translations
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Verb
kike (third-person singular simple present kikes, present participle kiking, simple past and past participle kiked)
- (transitive, offensive, uncommon) To render something more Jewish.
- (transitive, offensive, uncommon) To haggle or swindle in order to obtain a better deal from.
References
- ^ Rosten, Leo (1968) The Joys of Yiddish, New York: Pocket Books Cited in Kim Pearson (2003) “kike”, in kpearson.faculty.tcnj.edu[1], (A rare usage is "kyke".), archived from the original on 2 June 2008
- ^ Kim Pearson (2003) “kike”, in kpearson.faculty.tcnj.edu[2], (A rare usage is "kyke".), archived from the original on 2 June 2008
Further reading
Anagrams
Japanese
Romanization
kike
Norwegian Bokmål
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle Low German kîken. Related to Swedish kika.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /çiːke/, [çiːkə]
Verb
kike (imperative kik, present tense kiker, past tense keik or kek, past participle kiket, present participle kikende)
Related terms
References
- “kike” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle Low German kiken.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /²çiːkə/
Verb
kike (present tense kik or kikar, past tense keik or kika, supine kike, past participle kiken or kika, present participle kikande, imperative kik)
Related terms
References
“kike” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Swahili
Pronunciation
Audio (Kenya): (file)
Adjective
-a kike (invariable)