(British informal) faulty.
1 Three outside places were vacant; one behind the coachman; two on the dickey .
2 One of them seated in the dickey looked down at me.
3 They come running like dickey birds looking for bugs on a hippo's back.
4 It was a landaulet, with a servant mounted on the dickey .
5 Shure, the man who put that sthory on the dickey - back knew his business.
6 He pulled aside his waistcoat and she saw he was wearing a dickey .
7 Every one was wearing a dirty cotton shirt and a dickey .
8 No dickey ticker was going to take that away from him.
9 The carriage is at the door: the maid and valet are in the dickey .
10 To purchasing bran-new paper shirt collar or dickey , to set off gray Petersham, 2
11 Upon my word of honor, this was not an unreasonable price for that dickey .
12 I will get out a blameless dickey , - if such there be.
13 Then came a little white cotton dickey , with a high standing collar and then--
14 The countryman in the dickey was no other than the Bow Street runner in disguise.
15 His waitress, after casting an interesting glance at his royal purple dickey , said, Good morning!
16 Why go gunning for a dickey bird when you can tie up to an eagle?
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