nickle
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See also: Nickle
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Noun
[edit]nickle (plural nickles)
Etymology 2
[edit]Noun
[edit]nickle
- Misspelling of nickel.
- 1922, Jessie H. Bancroft, Games for the Playground, Home, School and Gymnasium[1]:
- On top of the card place a dime or nickle; this should be exactly over the tip of the finger and in the middle of the card.
- 1919, Edward Alva Trueblood, In the Flash Ranging Service[2]:
- Sweet rolls, the kind that sell four for a nickle at home, cost two for a nickle.
- 1894, Anna Fuller, Peak and Prairie[3]:
- There were times when he was even constrained to hope that, by the same Great Influence, a spark of magnanimity had been awakened in Christie's abandoned soul; and once, when Eliza reported that her "pa" had given her a nickle, he almost believed that those seemingly ineffective words of his had, thanks to that same all-powerful intervention, made an impression.
- 1894, Anna Fuller, Peak and Prairie[4]:
- There were times when he was even constrained to hope that, by the same Great Influence, a spark of magnanimity had been awakened in Christie's abandoned soul; and once, when Eliza reported that her "pa" had given her a nickle, he almost believed that those seemingly ineffective words of his had, thanks to that same all-powerful intervention, made an impression.