noun General Slang

Kicks

/kɪks/ · noun · slang

Thrills and good times pursued for their own sake — fun, excitement, a buzz.

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Definitions

1

A source of enjoyment or a passing enthusiasm one is into.

“He's on a Zen kick this month.”
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2

Shoes, in the parallel jazz/street usage that overlapped the era.

“Dig those new kicks, daddy-o.”
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3

Fun or excitement; pleasure sought for the rush of it.

“We drove all night just for kicks.”
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Kicks In A Sentence

They crashed the gallery opening just for kicks.
Poetry readings are her kicks lately.
We hit the road for no reason but kicks.

Origin & Usage

From 1940s jazz and Black American slang, where 'kicks' meant thrills or a pleasurable buzz. It became central to Beat philosophy — Kerouac's characters chase 'kicks' across America in 'On the Road.'

People Also Ask

What does kicks mean in beatnik slang?

It means thrills, fun, or excitement pursued for its own sake. 'For kicks' meant doing something purely for the rush of it.

Where did kicks come from?

From 1940s jazz and Black American slang for a pleasurable buzz. The Beat Generation made chasing 'kicks' a core part of its restless ethos.

Does kicks mean shoes too?

Yes — in overlapping jazz and street slang 'kicks' also meant shoes, a sense that survives in modern sneaker culture.

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