Kaintuck
English
editAdjective
editKaintuck (not comparable)
- (US, dialect) Of or pertaining to the US state of Kentucky.
- c. 1958, Theodore Sturgeon, "The Man Who Figured Everything" in The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon, Vol. X (2005 North Atlantic Books edition), →ISBN (Google books preview):
- His single shot had clipped a boulder right by Coe's head, just the way a Kaintuck rifleman barks a squirrel.
- 2009, Robert Hicks, A Separate Country[1], →ISBN:
- I felt at home in the city. Me, a Kaintuck country cracker.
- c. 1958, Theodore Sturgeon, "The Man Who Figured Everything" in The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon, Vol. X (2005 North Atlantic Books edition), →ISBN (Google books preview):
Noun
editKaintuck (plural Kaintucks)
- (US, dialect) A native or resident of Kentucky, especially one who has a rustic character.
- 1902, Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville Days, ch. 9 Colonel Sterett's Reminiscences (Google books preview):
- "Sech deescriptions . . . brings back my yearlin' days in good old Tennessee. We-all is a heaplike you Kaintucks down our way."
- 1998, Barbara Hambly, Fever Season[2], →ISBN:
- There was a time when January would have been surprised that a Kaintuck could accomplish such mathematics.
- 1902, Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville Days, ch. 9 Colonel Sterett's Reminiscences (Google books preview):
- (US, dialect, obsolete) A worker, especially one having a crude or rowdy manner, on a boat that transported commercial goods on the Mississippi River.
- 1974, Sylvia Wrobel and George Grider, Isaac Shelby: Kentucky's First Governor and Hero of Three Wars, Cumberland Press, p. 130:
- Most New Orleans citizens . . . were used to the Kentucky riverboatmen, the Kaintucks others called them; they called themselves alligator-horses, and they were largely a rough and tumble breed.
- 1974, Sylvia Wrobel and George Grider, Isaac Shelby: Kentucky's First Governor and Hero of Three Wars, Cumberland Press, p. 130:
Proper noun
editKaintuck
- (US, dialect) The US state of Kentucky.
- 1873, Mark Twain, Charles Dudley Warner, chapter 1, in The Gilded Age:
- Si Higgins he's ben over to Kaintuck n' married a high-toned gal thar, outen the fust families.
- 1921, John Buchan, chapter 12, in The Path of the King:
- "There ain't no sech hunter as Jim ever came out of Virginny, no, nor out of Caroliny, neither. It was him that fust telled me of Kaintuck."
Synonyms
edit- (of or pertaining to Kentucky): Kentuckian
- (native or resident of Kentucky): Kentuckian