i Register
In some senses, cocky is marked as dated, informal, British, colloquial, historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.
ADJ.
'pretty, careless, dear, dear, little, pretty, pretty
VERB + COCKY
calling, doesn't, don't, feeling, get, got, grinned, let's
COCKY + NOUN
', fortune, grin, people, phronius, ruf, waithman, ye
PREP.
along, off, on, since
ADV.
already, presently, presently, sometimes
adj
Overly confident; arrogant and boastful.
And now I think I may be cocky, / Since fortune has ſmurtl'd on me, / I'm Jenny, an' ye ſhall be Jockie, / 'Tis right we together ſud be; [...]
Pretty girls, indeed, can with impunity, menace their lovers with quitting them; but cocky Waithman, will, if he try it often, soon find, that he cannot play such tricks without having to repent of it.
noun
Used as a term of endearment, originally for a person of either sex, but later primarily for a man.
Nay Cocky, Cocky, nay dear Cocky, do not cry, I was but in Jeſt, I was not ifeck [in faith?].
Lu[cretia]. Ah, ah, are we not by our ſelves already, my Cocky? So[phronius]. Let us go out of the Way ſomewhere, into a more private Place.
noun
A familiar name for a cockatoo.
By that time, the white cockatoo—a beautiful bird, as large as a common fowl—would find out the family gathering-place, and waddle along, calling 'Pretty Cocky! Pretty Cocky!' […] Presently, Cocky ruffles his plumage till he looks half as large again as before; he throws his crest, with its double fan of brilliantly yellow feathers, as far forward as possible, and spreads and closes it rapidly.
"Hello Cocky! What yer want?" This in a more-than-human voice from a fine sulphur-crested cockatoo. "Hello Cocky!" His thick black tongue worked in his narrow mouth. So absolutely human the sound, and yet a bird's.
Clipping of cockatoo farmer (“small-scale farmer”); (by extension) any farmer or owner of rural land.
'I'll get down among the cockies along the Lachlan or some of those rivers,' said Mitchell, throwing down his swag beneath a big tree. 'A man stands a better show down there. [...] One cocky I worked for wanted me to stay with him for good. Sorry I didn't. [...']
We camped one evening at Narrangidgery Creek, close b’ a cocky’s ’umstead.
And now I think I may be cocky, / Since fortune has ſmurtl'd on me, / I'm Jenny, an' ye ſhall be Jockie, / 'Tis right we together ſud be; [...]
WiktionaryPretty girls, indeed, can with impunity, menace their lovers with quitting them; but cocky Waithman, will, if he try it often, soon find, that he cannot play such tricks without having to repent of it
WiktionaryYou are a cockie chap to go again a man axing where and what you 'a been when you are axing a place, [...]
WiktionaryNay Cocky, Cocky, nay dear Cocky, do not cry, I was but in Jeſt, I was not ifeck [in faith?].
WiktionaryLu[cretia]. Ah, ah, are we not by our ſelves already, my Cocky? So[phronius]. Let us go out of the Way ſomewhere, into a more private Place.
WiktionaryNow, cocky, ye may gang about your buſineſs; when ye come back, I'ſe tauk with you in another ſtile.
Wiktionaryi Register
In some senses, cocky is marked as dated, informal, British, colloquial, historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.