hackney
See also: Hackney
English
Etymology
From Middle English hakeney, from the placename Hackney (formerly a town; now a borough of London), used for grazing horses before sale, from Old English *Hacan īeġ (“Haca's Island”, literally “Hook's Island”). The Old French haquenée (“ambling mare for ladies”), Latinized in England to hakeneius, is originally from the English.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhækni/
Audio (Southern England): (file) Audio (General American): (file) - Rhymes: -ækni
Noun
hackney (countable and uncountable, plural hackneys)
- (archaic) An ordinary horse.
- A carriage for hire or a cab.
- 1838 (date written), L[etitia] E[lizabeth] L[andon], chapter XIV, in Lady Anne Granard; or, Keeping up Appearances. […], volume I, London: Henry Colburn, […], published 1842, →OCLC, page 186:
- "Mamma would die if she knew. The boy," replied Georgiana, "walked with us to Oxford Street, and we took a hackney-coach. Will Mrs. Gooch ever forgive us for getting out of it at her door?"
- A horse used to ride or drive.
- A breed of English horse.
- (archaic) A hired drudge; a hireling; a prostitute.
- (archaic, uncountable) Inferior writing; literary hackwork.
- quoted in 1972, Pat Rogers, Grub Street: Studies in a Subculture (page 384)
- Not that the existence of Grub street is to be doubted: it was, indeed, a grim actuality, and many a garreter realised by experience
How unhappy's the fate
To live by one's pate
And to be forced to write hackney for bread.
- Not that the existence of Grub street is to be doubted: it was, indeed, a grim actuality, and many a garreter realised by experience
- quoted in 1972, Pat Rogers, Grub Street: Studies in a Subculture (page 384)
Derived terms
Translations
carriage for hire or a cab
horse used to ride or drive
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Adjective
hackney (not comparable)
- Offered for hire.
- hackney coaches
- (figuratively) Much used; trite; mean.
- hackney authors
- a. 1685, Wentworth Dillon, 4th Earl of Roscommon, The Ghost of the old House of Commons to the new one appointed to meet at Oxford.:
- his accumulative and hackney tongue
Translations
Verb
hackney (third-person singular simple present hackneys, present participle hackneying, simple past and past participle hackneyed)
- (transitive) To make uninteresting or trite by frequent use.
- (transitive) To use as a hackney.
- (transitive) To carry in a hackney coach.
- 1785, William Cowper, The Task:
- […] To her, who, frugal only that her thrift / May feed excesses she can ill afford, / Is hackneyed home unlackeyed; […]