hiccup

/ˈhɪkʌp/

hiccup

English Noun Top 12,108
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Ryan) (medium)
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Definition

A spasm of the diaphragm, or the resulting sound.

Etymology

From earlier hickop, alteration of earlier hicket, hyckock, from hic (onomatopoeic) + -ock (diminutive suffix). Akin to Scots hick, hix (“hiccup”), West Frisian hik (“hiccup”), Dutch hik (“hiccup”), Middle Low German hükup, huckup, hueckup (modern Low German hick (“hiccup”)), German hicksen (“to hiccup”, verb), Alemannic German Hidsgi (“hiccup”), Danish hikke (“hiccup”), Swedish hicka (“hiccup”), hicka (“to hiccup”, verb), Icelandic hiksti (“hiccup”). Displaced yex, from Middle English yexen, ȝisken, ȝixen, ȝoxen (“to hiccup”), from Old English ġiscian, ġeocsian (“to hiccup”).

Example Sentences

  • "There was a loud hiccup from the back of the room and the class erupted in laughter."
  • "Albert didn't notice the switch, the subliminal flash and hiccup in time as the man he had been talking to only seconds before was catapulted backwards half an hour."
  • "There's been a slight hiccup in the processing of this quarter's results."
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