you little dickens

  • 1dickens — 1. the dickens n. the devil. (Always with the in this sense.) □ She was going to kick the dickens out of me. □ I felt as bad as the dickens, but what could I do? 2. n. a devilish or impish child. (Also a term of address.) □ Come her …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 2Little Jimmy Dickens — Dickens performing at the Grand Ole Opry in 2004 Background information Birth name James Cecil Dickens …

    Wikipedia

  • 3Little Jimmy Dickens — Dickens en el Grand Ole Opry en 2004 Nombre real James Cecil Dickens Origen Bolt …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 4Dickens (disambiguation) — Dickens may refer to: Contents 1 People 1.1 Charles Dickens family/descendants 1.2 Writers …

    Wikipedia

  • 5Little Mo Mitchell — EastEnders character Portrayed by Kacey Ainsworth Created by Tony Jordan Introduced by …

    Wikipedia

  • 6Dickens Hill — Nick Cotton (left) and Den Watts (right) serve time together at Dickens Hill prison. Dickens Hill is a fictional prison in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. The prison was part of a storyline that aired between 1988 and 1989. The storyline centred… …

    Wikipedia

  • 7Little Orphan Annie — For James Whitcomb Riley s 1885 poem, see Little Orphant Annie. Little Orphan Annie Cupples Leon collection (1933) Author(s) Harold Gray Current status / sch …

    Wikipedia

  • 8Little Women — This article is about the novel. For other uses, see Little Women (disambiguation). Little Women   …

    Wikipedia

  • 9little birds that can sing and won’t sing must be made to sing — 1678 J. RAY English Proverbs (ed. 2) 343 The bird that can sing and will not sing must be made to sing. 1846 DICKENS Cricket on Hearth ii. ‘The bird that can sing and won’t sing, must be made to sing, they say,’ grumbled Tackleton. ‘What about… …

    Proverbs new dictionary

  • 10devil, you —    ‘Devil’ is seldom used vocatively in modern times to refer to a person who is considered to be truly fiendish, inhumanly cruel, or wicked. Such usage is found in Shakespeare, as when Albany says to Goneril in King Lear (4:ii), ‘See thyself,… …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address