2. Noun. (plural of mickey) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mickeys
1. mickey [n] - See also: mickey
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mickeys
Literary usage of Mickeys
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Notes on North America, Agricultural, Economical, and Social by James Finlay Weir Johnston (1851)
"Charivari of the mickeys of Woodstock.— Farm at Jacksontown. — Speculators in
land.—Iron ore and iron smelting.—Itinerant lecturers. ..."
2. Notes on North America, Agricultural, Economical, and Social by James Finlay Weir Johnston (1851)
"Charivari of the mickeys of Woodstock.— Farm at Jacksontown. — Speculators in
land.—Iron ore and iron smelting.—Itinerant lecturers. ..."
3. The responsibilities of the novelist, and other literary essays by Frank Norris (1903)
"... and mickeys are different individuals. Error. They are merely different names
of the boy that perennially and persistently remains the same. ..."
4. Austral English: A Dictionary of Australasian Words, Phrases, and Usages by Edward Ellis Morris (1898)
"Micky, «. young wild bull. " Said to have originated in Gippsland, Victoria.
Probably from the association of bulls with mickeys, or Irishmen. ..."
5. The Standard Index of Short Stories, 1900-1914 by Francis James Hannigan (1918)
"Mun 47: 934 S '12 Two mickeys. HJ O'Higgins. Everybody's 15:337 S '06 Two of a kind.
E. Kelley. McClure 17:251 Jl '01 Two of them. J. Cooper. ..."
6. The Library of Wit and Humor, Prose and Poetry: Selected from the Literature by Ainsworth Rand Spofford, Rufus Edmonds Shapley (1884)
"... and the Tims, and the mickeys, were rubbing down horses, cleaning knives, or
drawing forth extra tables from their dusty repose ; and the Biddys, ..."