Dick's hatband

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Unknown; theories include reference to some local figure named Dick or Nick; to Satan (cf. Old Nick and dickens); and to Richard Cromwell.

Noun[edit]

Dick's hatband

  1. (colloquial, now principally US, dated) Used in similes as an intensifier, indicating someone or something is extremely strange, tight, etc.
    • 1742, James Ayres, Sancho at Court, act III, line 44:
      A young Lady, the first or second Day of her Marriage, looks as queer as Dick's Hat-Band.
    • 1796, Francis Grose, A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, s.v. "Dick":
      I am as queer as Dick's hatband; that is, out of spirits, or don't know what ails me.
    • 2014, C.B. McKenzie, Bad Country, page 108:
      She's sharp as a tack when she wants to be and still tight as Dick's Hatband about her money.

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