Dornick

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Dornick is cited in the Oxford English Dictionary as a dialectal US term originating around the 1840s, meaning "pebble, stone or small boulder". The OED found the earliest occurrence of the word at in the Daily Pennant (St. Louis) and suggests a derivation from Irish "dornóg" (small stone), alternate spelling "doirneog" (round stone, handstone).[1]

The Cassell Dictionary of Slang notes it was also used to mean "coin".[citation needed]

"Hard as dornick" was a colloquial way of affirming a man's toughness in Indiana in 1939.[2]

Particular usages

Cartoonist George Herriman used "dornick" frequently in his strip Krazy Kat to refer to the brick which Ignatz Mouse threw at Krazy's head in most episodes.

In his screenplay for the 1936 sequel After the Thin Man, author Dashiell Hammett narratively describes a note thrown through a window wrapped around "a stone" but tells the police "Somebody wrapped it around a dornick and heaved it through my window."

The word and its variant spelling, "Donnick," persist in placenames, for example, Oak Donnick Floodway on the

Poinsett County
.

Dornick also refers to a thick cloth which gets its name from the Flemish town 'Doornick' where it was first manufactured.

In the pulp magazine "The Land of Terror", which came out in April 1933, author Lester Dent, writing under the name Kenneth Robeson, tells of a lost world explored by adventurer Doc Savage. At one point he writes "He came to a vast dornick which had a deeply corrugated surface."

References