▪ I. † snick-up, n.1 Obs. rare.
[? f. snick v.1]
A hangman's rope; a halter.
| 1623 J. Taylor (Water P.) Praise of Hempseed 15 A Tiburne Hempen caudell well will cure you;..in Sparta it ycleped was Snickvp, which is in English Gallow grasse. |
▪ II. snick-up, n.2 Now dial.
Also 9 sniccup.
[Imitative: cf. LG. snik-up hiccup, Du. snik gasp, sob.]
A sneeze, sneezing-fit.
| 1692 L'Estrange Fables (1694) 397 If there had been but a Snick-up in the case, you'd have cry'd ‘The Lord bless ye Sir’. 1879 N. & Q. 5th Ser. XII. 45/2 The turkeys in his neighbourhood [Essex] were dying very much this season of the ‘snickups’. By this he meant a kind of sneezing fit. |
▪ III. snick-up, v.
see snick v.1