0 past simple and past participle of kick --
1 to hit someone or something with the foot, or to move the feet and legs suddenly and violently: --
One of the problems that we kicked around was that of dueling-silent duels, noisy duels, and so on.
To include kicked systems into the geometric framework introduced above, we start with the following observation.
He was hit on his legs and ribs with sticks, kicked in his stomach, and punched in his face, neck and chest.
By 1996, the media hype machine had kicked into full gear.
What was new, though, was the inclusion of an explicit two-year time limit before a work requirement kicked in.
The petit bourgeois unions and their political representatives kicked back wildly.
We walked through the doors as the wine and valium kicked in.
A young man in remission had a first memory of his ginger cat being kicked off the balcony by one of his dad's enemies.