sicker
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈsɪkɚ/
- Rhymes: -ɪkə(ɹ)
Audio (US): (file) - Hyphenation: sic‧ker
Etymology 1
Inherited from Middle English siker, sikker, sykkere, secre, seccre, from Old English sēocra (“sicker”), equivalent to sick + -er.
Adjective
sicker
Etymology 2
From Middle English siker, from Old English sicer, sicor, from Proto-West Germanic *sikur (“free, secure”), from Latin sēcūrus (“secure”, literally “without care”). Doublet of sure and secure.
Alternative forms
Adjective
sicker (obsolete outside dialects)
- Certain.
- I'm sicker that he's not home.
- Secure, safe.
- To walk a sicker path
- 1579, Immeritô [pseudonym; Edmund Spenser], “September. Ægloga Nona.”, in The Shepheardes Calender: […], London: […] Hugh Singleton, […], →OCLC, folio 36, recto:
- But ſicker ſo it is, as the bꝛight ſtarre / Seemeth ay greater, when it is farre:
- 1880, L.B. Walford, “Dick Netherby”, in Good Words[1], volume 22, Alexander Strahan and Company, page 774:
- And here was we made sicker than he was wi' you […]
- 1896, Samuel Rutherford Crockett, chapter XVII, in The Raiders: Being Some Passages in the Life of John Faa, Lord and Earl of Little Egypt[2], Macmillan and Company, page 125:
- I'm as great on the side o' the law as it's siccar to be in thae uncertain times.
Adverb
sicker (obsolete outside dialects)
Derived terms
- sickerhood
- sickerly
- sickerness
Etymology 3
Inherited from Middle English *sikeren (attested only as sikeriez (“(it) trickles, (it) leaks, (it) oozes”)), from Old English sicerian (“to ooze, seep”), from Proto-West Germanic *sikarōn, from Proto-Germanic *sikarōną (“to trickle”), from Proto-Germanic *sīką (“slow running water”). Cognate with German Low German sickern (“to seep”), German sickern (“to seep, trickle”). Akin also to English sitch.
Alternative forms
Verb
sicker (third-person singular simple present sickers, present participle sickering, simple past and past participle sickered)
- (intransitive, literal, figurative) To percolate, trickle, or seep; to ooze, as water through a crack.
- 1917, Gerhart Hauptmann, Ludwig Lewisohn, The Dramatic Works of Gerhart Hauptmann, volume 7, page 185:
- No drop of water fell from the hot blue
Or sickered from the skeleton of earth.
- 1926, Jakob Wassermann, Wedlock, volume 10, page 217:
- This cause had sickered into his soul; it had been branded upon his forehead somehow, by some hand; he knew not how nor by whom.
- 1943, Acta minerologica, petrographica, volumes 1-11, page 17:
- The solution steadily sickered through the debris and the sampling of the solutions could be carried out without taking the equipment into pieces.
References
- “sicker”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “sicker”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
- “sicker”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
Anagrams
German
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Verb
sicker
- inflection of sickern:
- first-person singular present
- singular imperative
Middle English
Adjective
sicker
- alternative form of siker
Adverb
sicker
- alternative form of siker