Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun slang, UK a member of the lower
classes .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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The word oik, by the way, is an old-fashioned English term for a person of uncouth behaviour and/or appearance.
Harry Blamires: The New Bloomsday Book Michael Allen 2005
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Cruddas - the Essex "oik" who really cares about Dagenham, it's people and prospects.
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I think that's "oik" you meant, Iain, not "oil", although agree oil of vitriol would describe the nasty little turd accurately.
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Note: [1] An "oik" is an English public school term for a uncultured/uneducated youth
Hex Enduction Hour Smith, Mark E., 1957 Mar. 5- 1982
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While the referring to him as "oik" was probably more of a joke than meant seriously, it probably reflects the attitudes which Osborne has encountered for most of his life.
Obsolete septicisle 2010
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An open-ended investment company, or OEIC (pronounced 'oik'), is a modern and more flexible version of a unit trust.
MoneyWeek RSS - All 2009
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An open-ended investment company, or OEIC (pronounced 'oik'), is a modern and more flexible version of a unit trust.
MoneyWeek RSS - All 2009
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The word 'oik' is a disparaging British-English term for "someone regarded as inferior."
The Brussels Journal - The Voice of Conservatism in Europe 2009
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An "oik" is an unpopular or disliked fellow pupil, an obnoxious or unpleasant person, a nitwit, or a clot.
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"oik" was sometimes pronounc'd 'oink', the sound a pig makes that is rutting around in the mud, dropping the 'n' was because of the spud that was also rolling around in 'la bouche' mostly used by the preppies on lesser preppies especially before prepaparition for a boot blacking.
MaryW commented on the word oik
Kate Atkinson, Case Histories (New York: Little Brown & Co., 2004), p. 224.May 30, 2016