different between hipster vs hickster

hipster

English

Alternative forms

  • (A person interested in the latest trends): hepster (dated)

Etymology

hip +? -ster. First attested for someone carrying something on their hip in the U.S. in the 1920s. Attested as a variant of hepster in the 1940s, for a follower of the latest fashions/trends/styles.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?h?p.st?/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?h?p.st?/

Noun

hipster (plural hipsters)

  1. A person who is keenly interested in the latest trends or fashions. [from earlier 20th c.]
    • c. 1954, Jack Kerouac, Untitled poem, in Book of Sketches, 1952-57, Penguin, 2006, p. 239,
      I, poor French Canadian Ti Jean become / a big sophisticated hipster esthete in / the homosexual arts []
  2. A member of Bohemian counterculture.
  3. An aficionado of jazz who considers himself or herself to be hip.
  4. (US, obsolete, Prohibition) A person who wears a hip flask (of alcohol).
  5. (US, obsolete, 1930s) A dancer, particularly a female one.
  6. Underwear with an elastic waistband at hip level.

Synonyms

(Prohibition):

  • vial villain
  • gentleman from Kentucky (from Kentucky backcountry moonshine)

Derived terms

Coordinate terms

(Prohibition):

  • suffer from hip disease (v.)
  • bootlegging (n.)
  • bootleg (v.) (from hiding flasks in the boot, or stocking)

Translations

Verb

hipster (third-person singular simple present hipsters, present participle hipstering, simple past and past participle hipstered)

  1. To behave like a hipster.
  2. To dress or decorate in a hip fashion.

References

Anagrams

  • Pithers, perisht, prehist.

French

Etymology

From English hipster.

Noun

hipster m or f (plural hipsters)

  1. hipster

Polish

Etymology

From English hipster.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?x?ip.st?r/

Noun

hipster m pers (feminine hipsterka)

  1. hipster (person interested in the latest trends)
  2. hipster (aficionado of jazz who considers himself or herself to be hip)

Declension

Derived terms

  • (adjective) hipsterski

Further reading

  • hipster in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
  • hipster in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Portuguese

Etymology

From English hipster.

Noun

hipster m, f (plural hipsters)

  1. hipster (person interested in the latest trends)

Spanish

Etymology

From English hipster.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?xibste?/, [?xi??s.t?e?]

Noun

hipster m (plural hipsters or hipster)

  1. hipster
    Synonyms: gafapasta, modernillo

Derived terms

  • hipsterismo

hipster From the web:

  • what hipster means
  • what hipsters wear
  • what hipsters say
  • what hipsters like
  • what's hipster style
  • what's hipster underwear
  • what hipsters eat
  • what hipsters look like


hickster

English

Etymology

Blend of hick +? hipster

Noun

hickster (plural hicksters)

  1. (Can we clean up(+) this sense?) A hick who attempts to be hip (that is, to be a hipster).
    • 1960, William Garland Rogers, Mildred Weston, Carnival crossroads: the story of Times Square:
      Hawk-eyed bus-tour agents mounting watch at the intersections, flaunting printed signs tucked in the bands of their visored caps to advertise their business, claim they can spot the hickster nine times out of ten.

Anagrams

  • Hetricks, chirkest, kitscher, skitcher

hickster From the web:

  • what does huckster mean
  • what is a huckster
  • definition huckster
  • huckster meaning
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