nickable
English
Etymology
Adjective
nickable (comparative more nickable, superlative most nickable)
- Capable of being nicked (given a small cut or clip).
- 1951, John Wyndham, Pawley's Peepholes
- He drove right at, and through, the platform. It began to move, but I'd have nicked it myself, had it been nickable.
- 2004, Jason Boyett, A Guy's Guide to Life (page 121)
- Armpits are soft and tender and highly nickable. And sure, guys have a lot of face to shave, but that acreage doesn't compare to shaving two whole legs.
- 1951, John Wyndham, Pawley's Peepholes
- (UK, slang) Liable to be stolen.
- 2007, Libby Purves, A Little Learning (page 65)
- Meanwhile, the trade will have to make them [laptops] much, much cheaper, without compromising the screen: even at £500 a time they would be too nickable to walk home from school with.
- 2007, Libby Purves, A Little Learning (page 65)