Hike

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google

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early 19th century (originally dialect, as a verb): of unknown origin.


wiktionary

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From English dialectal hyke(“to walk vigorously”), probably a Northern form of hitch, from Middle English hytchen, hichen, icchen(“to move, jerk, stir”). Cognate with Scots hyke(“to move with a jerk”), dialectal German hicken(“to hobble, walk with a limp”), Danish hinke(“to hop”). More at hick.


etymonline

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hike (v.)

1809, hyke "to walk vigorously," an English dialectal word of unknown origin. A yike from 1736 answers to the sense. Not in widespread popular use until early 20c.


HIKE, v. to go away. It is generally used in a contemptuous sense. Ex. "Come, hike," i.e. take yourself off; begone. [Rev. Robert Forby, "The Vocabulary of East Anglia," London, 1830]


Sense of "pull up" (as pants) first recorded 1873 in American English, and may be a variant of hitch; extended sense of "raise" (as wages) is 1867. Related: Hiked; hiking.




hike (n.)

1865, from hike (v.).