Define Dickens Meaning

Dickens
Euphemistic expression for the devil. Used in mild oaths.
Also spelt dickins/Dickens.

What the dickens!
Hurts like the dickens!
By Mureil
Dickens
(noun) Any kind of a law enforcement officer who can levy a buzzkill. A cop, etc.


There's a dickens on your left. Turn right, mofo.
Lookout...Dickens!
Dicken's on your left, hit it.
By Sapphire
Dickens
abbreviation of "time-in-the-past-when-I-was-kicked-directly-in-the-dick-and-balls"; first shortened to "dick-and-balls" and then to "dick-ands," and finally to "dickens"

"That hurt like the dickens!"
By Lottie
Dickens

girl: "Damn I had a rough day. I need a good dickens"
By Issi
Dickens
slang term for a penis
may also be spelled "dickins"

niggastraightnigga: yo grrl, can i giya dat dickens!?
By Bobette
Dickens
Used as an espression of speed.

1. He was as faster than the dickens!!
By Vilma
Dickening
Rough sex, usually with one male dominating the other partner, resulting in said partner having a limp or mild bruising.

"Why is Shelbie walking funny?"
"Jeff gave her a good dickening after the party last night."
"Ouch."
By Jillian
Dickens
Similar but differing slightly to the term 'twat', a Dickens is a pompous and awkward bastard who will go out of his way to needlessly berate his fellow man. Owing to the Dickens' overinflated sense of self importance the term is almost exclusively applied to ex public school boys. Often a Dickens will have been subjected to repeated bummings as a choir boy resulting in frequent pegging throughout his adult life.

Person A: That bloke just called me a pleb!
Person B: Don't worry about it, the guy is a total Dickens.
By Darice
Dickening
Lovemaking performed by a dick that is so good it haunts you

Chad gave me a dickening last week and I think I may need to see an exorcist
By Arlana
Dickens
The term originated from Shakespeare's play "The Merry Wives of Windsor," in the 16th century. It is a term used in polite society to mean the Devil! (It has nothing to do with Charles Dickens.) The word appeared in a sentence (although sounding odd in modern day language) "I cannot tell what the dickens his name is my husband had him of."

My mom used to say, with humor, that someone was "full of the dickens!"

Now after researching it, I understand what she meant!

By Willetta