STICK (thing)
NOUNS
..950 — YARD a straight slender shoot or branch of a tree; a twig, a stick → obs.
1000 — YARD a stick or rod used as an instrument for administering strokes by way of punishment or otherwise → obs.
1250 — LUG a long stick or pole; the branch or limb of a tree → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1297 — WAND a rod, stick, or switch for chastisement
1300 — BASTON a staff or stick used as a weapon or a staff of office; a cudgel, a club, a truncheon → obs.
1300 — FAGGOT → FAGOT a bundle of sticks, twigs, or small branches of trees bound together, for use as fuel →
1450 — CAMMOCK a crooked stick or piece of wood; a short staff with a crooked head; any kind of walking stick
1518 — CRAMOCKE a crooked stick → obs.
1535 — GAD a stake or stout stick → Eng. dial.
1542 — RUTTOCK a stick or staff → obs.
1548 — BATON a staff or stick used as a weapon, sometimes also of iron, or iron-tipped; a club, a cudgel, or truncheon → obs.
1598 — BASTINADO a stick, staff, rod, cudgel, truncheon
..E17 — NAB → NABE the head of a stick → UK criminals’ sl.
1625 — BATOON a stout staff or stick used as a weapon; a cudgel, a club, a truncheon → arch.
1657 — BACIL a little stick → obs.
1678 — CAMMOCK a curved stick, esp. one used in the game of hockey → Sc.
1703 — CRAB-STICK a stick or cudgel of the wood of the crab-tree; a walking-stick made of the wood of the crab-tree; hence, a stick of any kind
1714 — LOODER a long, stout, rough stick → Irish
1726 — BASTER a stick or cudgel; a heavy blow
1789 — POLTING LUG a long stick used to knock down fruit from trees → Eng. dial.
1790 — BALLOW a cudgel, a stick, a pole → Eng. dial. obs.
1802 — LEWDER a long, stout, rough stick; a club, a cudgel → Sc.
1816 — KEBBIE → KEBBY staff or stick with a hooked head → N. Eng. dial. & Sc.
1828 — ALPEEN a cudgel; a stout-headed stick → Anglo-Irish
1832 — WALLOPER anything with which one administers a thrashing; a stick, a cudgel → colloq.
1838 — FAGGALD a faggot, a bundle of twigs or heath tied with straw ropes → Sc. obs.
1842 — TWIG a stout stick → Eng. dial.
1848 — GAD-STICK a stick or whip for driving oxen or punishing children → Amer. dial.
.M19 — LACKERY→ LACKRY a stick; a piece of wood → Brit. army sl.
.M19 — PADDY QUICK a stick → rhyming sl.
1851 — MOCK a large stick → Eng. dial.
1862 — CUMMOCK a crooked stick; a short staff with a crooked head; any kind of walking stick → Sc.
1864 — BATLING a small stick, a fagot → Eng. dial.
1866 — RAMACK → RAMMACK → RAMMOCK a big rough piece of wood; a gnarled and knotty stick → Sc.
1891 — BUD a stick, switch, or rod → Amer. dial.
1892 — WADDY a stick; a walking-stick → Aust. sl. (Bk.)
1897 — VERGE a rod, wand, or stick
1898 — CAMBAUTE a crooked bat or stick → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1898 — COSH a stick, a school cane → Eng. dial.
1899 — BATTOON a short, straight stick; a pool or billiards cue → Amer. dial.
1900 — FADGE a bundle of sticks, a faggot → Sc. & Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1900 — GADWAND a long stick → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1904 — SCOW a stick; a small branch or twig → Sc. (Bk.)
1905 — RAMPION a stick, a cudgel → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1911 — CHATWOOD kindling wood; little sticks → Amer. dial.
1932 — LADY QUINCE a switch made of quince wood, used to punish children → Amer. dial.
1941 — LADY BIRCH a switch used to punish children → Amer. dial.