Mick$501135$ - перевод на голландский
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Mick$501135$ - перевод на голландский

MALE GIVEN NAME
Mick (disambiguation); MICK

Mick      
n. mannelijke voornaam (verkorting van Michaël)
Mick Jagger         
  • Jagger performing with the Stones at [[Desert Trip]] in October 2016
  • alt=Jagger and Richards in San Francisco during the Rolling Stones' 1972 US tour
  • Jagger live at the [[San Siro]], Milan, Italy, in 2003
  • Jagger singing during the Rolling Stones' [[50 & Counting]] Tour in Boston, Massachusetts, 2013
  • Jagger performing on the Rolling Stones' [[Voodoo Lounge Tour]] in February 1995
  • Jagger performing in May 1976, in [[Zuiderpark Stadion]], [[The Hague]], Netherlands
  • Jagger performing in 1982
  • Jagger with [[the Rolling Stones]] in 1964. From left to right: [[Brian Jones]], [[Charlie Watts]], Mick Jagger, [[Bill Wyman]], [[Keith Richards]]
  • Shine a Light]]'' in Berlin
  • [[The Mick Jagger Centre]], Dartford
ENGLISH SONGWRITER, SINGER OF THE ROLLING STONES
Sir Michael Jagger; Sir Mick Jagger; Michael Philip Jagger; Mick jagger; Jagger, Mick; Sir Mick; Basil Jagger; Sir Michael Philip "Mick" Jagger; Propellor Boy; Sir Michael Phillip "Mick" Jagger; James Jagger; Jimbo Mutant Shinobi; Mick Jaggar; Mcjagger; McJagger; Jaggeresque; Jagged Films; England Lost; Sir Michael Philip Jagger; Mick Jager; @MickJagger
n. Mick Jagger (Engelse rockzanger, vroeger leider van groep "the Rolling Stones)

Определение

Mick
¦ noun informal, offensive
1. an Irishman.
2. chiefly Austral. a Roman Catholic.
Origin
C19: familiar form of the given name Michael.

Википедия

Mick

Mick is a masculine given name or nickname, usually a short form (hypocorism) of Michael. Because of its popularity in Ireland, it is often used in England, the United Kingdom in general, English-speaking North America, and Australia as a derogatory term or ethnic slur for an Irish person or a person of Irish descent, particularly ethnic Irish Catholics. In Australia, the meaning also broadened to include any Roman Catholic. A colloquial but possibly false etymology also attributes the origin of the anti-Irish slur to the prevalence of Irish surnames containing the patronymic prefix "Mc-" (or Mhic); whether this patronym significantly contributed to the development of the ethnic slur is debated, but the prevalence of the first name or nickname "Mick" among Irish people is considered by etymologists to be the primary origin of the slur.