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#hicks — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #hicks, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Jordan Hicks, Eagles Super Bowl LII champion, retires from NFL

    Former Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Jordan Hicks officially announced his retirement from the NFL on Friday. Hicks hasn’t played…
    #NewsBeep #News #NFL #bleeding #Bowl #CA #Canada #Champion #Eagles #from #front-page #green #hicks #Jordan #lii #nation #retires #Sports #super
    newsbeep.com/ca/25282/

  2. Chiefs Roster: How well will Jaden Hicks replace Justin Reid in 2025?

    For the third straight year, I’m considering the 10 biggest questions I have for the Kansas City Chiefs…
    #NFL #KansasCityChiefs #KansasCity #Kansas #Chiefs #arrowhead #Football #front-page #hicks #how #in #Jaden #Justin #kansas-city-chiefs-game-information #kansas-city-chiefs-roster #pride #reid #replace #roster #well #will
    rawchili.com/nfl/145284/

  3. #SFGiants #mlb

    #Hicks gets into trouble again in the top of the 6th. Gives up 1 run & leaves the game with the bases loaded with no outs when #Trevino comes in & gives up hits, hits a batter & gives up a grand slam HR & then a solo HR which makes scoring really complicated but Hicks gets charged with 3 in the inning & Trevino 5.

    The Brewers lead 11-1 to end the top of the 6th and then the Giants leave the bases loaded w/o scoring a run in the bottom of the 6th.

    Sorry but I don't believe in miracles. This game is over.🤦‍♂️

    Too bad because the #Dodgers lost to the #Cubs 10-11.

    Oh well . . . 🤷‍♂️

    Tomorrow . . . Go Giants!!! 🥳🥳🥳

  4. #SFGiants #mlb

    #Hicks gets into trouble again in the top of the 6th. Gives up 1 run & leaves the game with the bases loaded with no outs when #Trevino comes in & gives up hits, hits a batter & gives up a grand slam HR & then a solo HR which makes scoring really complicated but Hicks gets charged with 3 in the inning & Trevino 5.

    The Brewers lead 11-1 to end the top of the 6th and then the Giants leave the bases loaded w/o scoring a run in the bottom of the 6th.

    Sorry but I don't believe in miracles. This game is over.🤦‍♂️

    Too bad because the #Dodgers lost to the #Cubs 10-11.

    Oh well . . . 🤷‍♂️

    Tomorrow . . . Go Giants!!! 🥳🥳🥳

  5. #SFGiants #MLB

    #Hicks is having trouble again. The #Brewers are hitting him like it's batting practice. Brewers lead 3-0 going into the bottom of the 3rd.

    If any one should be replaced in the rotation with #Birdsong, based on recent "performance," it's Hicks.🤷‍♂️

  6. „Ich muss mir von einem 28-jährigen Lümmel der Grünen nicht erklären lassen, ich sei ein Nazi……“ Kapiere ich nicht, Herr #Kubicki . Wenn es sie stört, dass es ihnen ein „28-jähriger Grüner Lümmel“ erklärt, stört es sie dann weniger, dass man sie als Nazi bezeichnet? Geht es darum, wer es sagt oder wie jung die Person ist? Was sagt man in Ihrer Kneipe dazu? #hicks #FDP #Lindner

  7. Welcher Hackenpenner hat denn die Geschirrspülerklappe aufgelassem #aua #hicks

  8. Welcher Hackenpenner hat denn die Geschirrspülerklappe aufgelassem #aua #hicks

  9. The medieval first names introduced to the British Isles from France by the Normans spawned a bewildering number of variants. In the late medieval period, when the number of first names was shrinking, this had the advantage of helping to differentiate folk with the same second name.

    The name Richard was particularly prolific when it came to coining offshoots. Richard and Rickard were interchangeable in medieval times, reflecting two pronunciations. Rickard produced the short forms Rick and Dick, which sometimes became vernacular Hick.

    The first map below indicates that Hick in Cornwall must have had many different origins. But it also suggests its heartland lay in mid-Cornwall from the north coast at Padstow through Bodmin to Fowey in the south and Liskeard to the south east. This pattern had become even more obvious by the mid-seventeenth century.

    In the early 1500s, only five per cent of Hicks listed in the tax returns had gained an <-s>. By 1641 90 per cent had. How and why had this additional <s> appeared? Surnames ending with <s> originated in the English south-west Midlands – Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Herefordshire in particular – when the poorer classes began to adopt hereditary surnames after the late 1200s. From about 1550 onwards some surnames from first names, like Hick, that did not originally have an <s> began to adopt them too. This was possibly by analogy with the earlier surnames that ended with <s> or possibly it just became the fashionable thing to do when a herd instinct set in.

    In Wales when hereditary surnames were adopted after the 1500s an added <s> became particularly common in names like Williams and Jones. It’s no coincidence that this was also the case in Cornwall, where many second names in the Cornish-speaking community only became hereditary surnames after 1500.

    In 1861, when there were 440 households in Cornwall headed by someone named Hicks, there had been some drift westwards to the mining districts of Redruth and St Just. However, the original heartland is still visible in the map of Hickses at that point.

    https://bernarddeacon.com/2024/08/07/cornwalls-top-20-surnames-19-hicks/

    #familyHistory #Hicks

  10. The medieval first names introduced to the British Isles from France by the Normans spawned a bewildering number of variants. In the late medieval period, when the number of first names was shrinking, this had the advantage of helping to differentiate folk with the same second name.

    The name Richard was particularly prolific when it came to coining offshoots. Richard and Rickard were interchangeable in medieval times, reflecting two pronunciations. Rickard produced the short forms Rick and Dick, which sometimes became vernacular Hick.

    The first map below indicates that Hick in Cornwall must have had many different origins. But it also suggests its heartland lay in mid-Cornwall from the north coast at Padstow through Bodmin to Fowey in the south and Liskeard to the south east. This pattern had become even more obvious by the mid-seventeenth century.

    In the early 1500s, only five per cent of Hicks listed in the tax returns had gained an <-s>. By 1641 90 per cent had. How and why had this additional <s> appeared? Surnames ending with <s> originated in the English south-west Midlands – Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Herefordshire in particular – when the poorer classes began to adopt hereditary surnames after the late 1200s. From about 1550 onwards some surnames from first names, like Hick, that did not originally have an <s> began to adopt them too. This was possibly by analogy with the earlier surnames that ended with <s> or possibly it just became the fashionable thing to do when a herd instinct set in.

    In Wales when hereditary surnames were adopted after the 1500s an added <s> became particularly common in names like Williams and Jones. It’s no coincidence that this was also the case in Cornwall, where many second names in the Cornish-speaking community only became hereditary surnames after 1500.

    In 1861, when there were 440 households in Cornwall headed by someone named Hicks, there had been some drift westwards to the mining districts of Redruth and St Just. However, the original heartland is still visible in the map of Hickses at that point.

    https://bernarddeacon.com/2024/08/07/cornwalls-top-20-surnames-19-hicks/

    #familyHistory #Hicks

  11. The medieval first names introduced to the British Isles from France by the Normans spawned a bewildering number of variants. In the late medieval period, when the number of first names was shrinking, this had the advantage of helping to differentiate folk with the same second name.

    The name Richard was particularly prolific when it came to coining offshoots. Richard and Rickard were interchangeable in medieval times, reflecting two pronunciations. Rickard produced the short forms Rick and Dick, which sometimes became vernacular Hick.

    The first map below indicates that Hick in Cornwall must have had many different origins. But it also suggests its heartland lay in mid-Cornwall from the north coast at Padstow through Bodmin to Fowey in the south and Liskeard to the south east. This pattern had become even more obvious by the mid-seventeenth century.

    In the early 1500s, only five per cent of Hicks listed in the tax returns had gained an <-s>. By 1641 90 per cent had. How and why had this additional <s> appeared? Surnames ending with <s> originated in the English south-west Midlands – Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Herefordshire in particular – when the poorer classes began to adopt hereditary surnames after the late 1200s. From about 1550 onwards some surnames from first names, like Hick, that did not originally have an <s> began to adopt them too. This was possibly by analogy with the earlier surnames that ended with <s> or possibly it just became the fashionable thing to do when a herd instinct set in.

    In Wales when hereditary surnames were adopted after the 1500s an added <s> became particularly common in names like Williams and Jones. It’s no coincidence that this was also the case in Cornwall, where many second names in the Cornish-speaking community only became hereditary surnames after 1500.

    In 1861, when there were 440 households in Cornwall headed by someone named Hicks, there had been some drift westwards to the mining districts of Redruth and St Just. However, the original heartland is still visible in the map of Hickses at that point.

    https://bernarddeacon.com/2024/08/07/cornwalls-top-20-surnames-19-hicks/

    #familyHistory #Hicks

  12. The medieval first names introduced to the British Isles from France by the Normans spawned a bewildering number of variants. In the late medieval period, when the number of first names was shrinking, this had the advantage of helping to differentiate folk with the same second name.

    The name Richard was particularly prolific when it came to coining offshoots. Richard and Rickard were interchangeable in medieval times, reflecting two pronunciations. Rickard produced the short forms Rick and Dick, which sometimes became vernacular Hick.

    The first map below indicates that Hick in Cornwall must have had many different origins. But it also suggests its heartland lay in mid-Cornwall from the north coast at Padstow through Bodmin to Fowey in the south and Liskeard to the south east. This pattern had become even more obvious by the mid-seventeenth century.

    In the early 1500s, only five per cent of Hicks listed in the tax returns had gained an <-s>. By 1641 90 per cent had. How and why had this additional <s> appeared? Surnames ending with <s> originated in the English south-west Midlands – Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Herefordshire in particular – when the poorer classes began to adopt hereditary surnames after the late 1200s. From about 1550 onwards some surnames from first names, like Hick, that did not originally have an <s> began to adopt them too. This was possibly by analogy with the earlier surnames that ended with <s> or possibly it just became the fashionable thing to do when a herd instinct set in.

    In Wales when hereditary surnames were adopted after the 1500s an added <s> became particularly common in names like Williams and Jones. It’s no coincidence that this was also the case in Cornwall, where many second names in the Cornish-speaking community only became hereditary surnames after 1500.

    In 1861, when there were 440 households in Cornwall headed by someone named Hicks, there had been some drift westwards to the mining districts of Redruth and St Just. However, the original heartland is still visible in the map of Hickses at that point.

    https://bernarddeacon.com/2024/08/07/cornwalls-top-20-surnames-19-hicks/

    #familyHistory #Hicks

  13. The medieval first names introduced to the British Isles from France by the Normans spawned a bewildering number of variants. In the late medieval period, when the number of first names was shrinking, this had the advantage of helping to differentiate folk with the same second name.

    The name Richard was particularly prolific when it came to coining offshoots. Richard and Rickard were interchangeable in medieval times, reflecting two pronunciations. Rickard produced the short forms Rick and Dick, which sometimes became vernacular Hick.

    The first map below indicates that Hick in Cornwall must have had many different origins. But it also suggests its heartland lay in mid-Cornwall from the north coast at Padstow through Bodmin to Fowey in the south and Liskeard to the south east. This pattern had become even more obvious by the mid-seventeenth century.

    In the early 1500s, only five per cent of Hicks listed in the tax returns had gained an <-s>. By 1641 90 per cent had. How and why had this additional <s> appeared? Surnames ending with <s> originated in the English south-west Midlands – Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Herefordshire in particular – when the poorer classes began to adopt hereditary surnames after the late 1200s. From about 1550 onwards some surnames from first names, like Hick, that did not originally have an <s> began to adopt them too. This was possibly by analogy with the earlier surnames that ended with <s> or possibly it just became the fashionable thing to do when a herd instinct set in.

    In Wales when hereditary surnames were adopted after the 1500s an added <s> became particularly common in names like Williams and Jones. It’s no coincidence that this was also the case in Cornwall, where many second names in the Cornish-speaking community only became hereditary surnames after 1500.

    In 1861, when there were 440 households in Cornwall headed by someone named Hicks, there had been some drift westwards to the mining districts of Redruth and St Just. However, the original heartland is still visible in the map of Hickses at that point.

    https://bernarddeacon.com/2024/08/07/cornwalls-top-20-surnames-19-hicks/

    #familyHistory #Hicks

  14. Maximum in the first frame of the session, respotted black in the second. Think I’ll stay with this table for a while :) #Saengkham #Hicks #snooker #WorldChampionshipQualifiers

  15. Maximum in the first frame of the session, respotted black in the second. Think I’ll stay with this table for a while :) #Saengkham #Hicks #snooker #WorldChampionshipQualifiers