(colloquial) Shoes.
kicks
Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for kicks.
Editorial note
This is where Scott's argument kicks in, where the mapping is doing all the work.
Quick take
(colloquial) Shoes.
Meaning at a glance
The clearest senses and uses of kicks gathered in one view.
(colloquial) Commissary, or the balance of a commissary account.
Definitions
Core meanings and parts of speech for kicks.
noun
(colloquial) Shoes.
noun
(colloquial) Commissary, or the balance of a commissary account.
Example sentences
This is where Scott's argument kicks in, where the mapping is doing all the work.
After £10.6k in salary they say one could take £28.5k in dividends before higher tax kicks in.
If Trump gets elected, what would be the appropriate prize for whoever kicks him out of the White House?
>This is where Scott's argument kicks in, where the mapping is doing all the work.
Or when geopolitics kicks in and the rocket in another country suddenly or potentially becomes unavailable.
Maybe when the delivery drone thing kicks off (if ever) they can make a slightly larger one and deliver people also.
C is also boring, but I assumed mocking it here would be asking for free kicks to the face.
On iPad it kicks me out every few mins claiming I logged in somewhere else (I didn't).
When working on kicks, they held on to little floating dumbell bars.
I imagine it's because 10% kicks in really easy and requires the you to stop and think about your actions.
My 60fps-on-skyrim-ultra-settings PC stumbles, lags, and kicks up all the fans to handle rendering some of these web pages because of all the ads.
The guy who practices one kick a thousand times is much more formidable than the guy who practices a thousand different kicks one time.
Quote examples
If Newegg successfully defends and defeats a patent claim by having the patent declared invalid, the law of what the lawyers call "res judicata" (meaning, "a matter adjudged") kicks in and kills that patent off forever.
I find it interesting that when the government distorts a market via pricing controls, taxes, or other means, the law of unintended consequences almost inevitably kicks in and it's result is either "bad luck" or calls to "fill in the loopholes!" Distort the market and people are rational-enough agents and will change their behavior, just not necessarily entirely in the way you hope/want.
Frequently asked questions
Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.
How do you use kicks in a sentence?
This is where Scott's argument kicks in, where the mapping is doing all the work.
What does kicks mean?
(colloquial) Shoes.
What part of speech is kicks?
kicks is commonly used as noun.