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Huckle

A geordie word meaning a person of the homosexual persuasion.

Ah divvent kna aboot him, like. He looks a bit of a huckle to me.

by Fistythegland October 25, 2019

42๐Ÿ‘ 4๐Ÿ‘Ž


Huckle

A baby or child who's Mommy operates a meth lab.

"Save my HUCKLE" screamed Mommy as the firefighters attempted to put out the trailer fire started by the meth lab explosion.

by charlesmarx September 16, 2009

22๐Ÿ‘ 42๐Ÿ‘Ž


Huckle

To read Huckleberry Finn. Slang popularized due to its characteristic of being "a cooler abbrev."

What are you doing?
Huckle-ing.
What's so funny?
Absolutely nothing.

by hucklemonster March 31, 2011

11๐Ÿ‘ 35๐Ÿ‘Ž


Huckle

A nice person!!

Did you hear that joke Huckle said?
Yeah, it sucked ass.

by Efigeato April 5, 2010

7๐Ÿ‘ 30๐Ÿ‘Ž


huckled

To be arrested by the polis, grabbed by the fuzz, sent to the pokey, apprehended by the filth, busted by the pigs,

have ye heard about bob man? He was pissed trying to rob the bookies wearing a pair o' his ma's auld tights, silly cunt couldn't see through the tights, ran into the door on way out, knocked himself spark oot, and when he woke up he got huckled by the polis!

by The Count of Castlelaw May 11, 2015

17๐Ÿ‘ 5๐Ÿ‘Ž


huckle buck

Its a sexual Position and a nice one at that...

Damn last Night he had my legs Over my head...!

by $Only1Dimepiece$ December 22, 2003

286๐Ÿ‘ 147๐Ÿ‘Ž


huckle bearer

Huckle bearer is a nonexistent word that is claimed to have been used in the South to mean the same as 'pallbearer' during the 1800s. This is based on the claim that the term huckle referred to a coffin handle. This term was made up out of whole cloth by a 'historian' engaged in blatant speculation after the release of the movie Tombstone, where Doc Holliday, played by Val Kilmer, utters the famous line "I'm your huckleberry." The claim is that the real Doc Holliday said 'I'm your hucklebearer." Some also claim that this is the correct line from the movie. It is all complete nonsense. There is no evidence that this term ever existed.

"I'm your huckleberry" is a well-attested English idiom that was used during the 1800s and is still used in some parts of the South today. It probably does not come from Mark Twain's character Huckleberry Finn since it seems to have existed before the novel was published. It means "I'm your man" or "I'm the man for the job."

"Some people say that pallbearers were once called huckle bearers."

by Essential English April 21, 2022

113๐Ÿ‘ 50๐Ÿ‘Ž