As verbs the difference between pikey and piked
is that pikey is (uk|slang|derogatory) to steal while piked is (pike).
As a noun pikey
is a low-ranking soldier who merely carries a pike or pikey can be (british|pejorative) a working-class (often underclass) person; can vary from specifically irish travellers to gypsies or travellers from any ethnic background, but now increasingly used for any socially undesirable person, with negative connotations of benefit fraud, theft, single-parent families and living on run-down estates.
As an adjective piked is
furnished with a pike; ending in a point; peaked; pointed.
pikey
English
Etymology 1
pike + -y
Noun
(
en noun)
A low-ranking soldier who merely carries a pike.
Etymology 2
From obsolete pike , to depart or travel, or possibly from turnpike
(en) - needs to be confirmed
Noun
(
en noun)
(British, pejorative) A working-class (often underclass) person; can vary from specifically Irish Travellers to gypsies or travellers from any ethnic background, but now increasingly used for any socially undesirable person, with negative connotations of benefit fraud, theft, single-parent families and living on run-down estates.
See also
* charva
* chav
* yob
* gypsy
Etymology 3
Derived from the stereotype that all gypsies or other travellers are thieves.
Verb
(
en verb)
(UK, slang, derogatory) to steal.
piked
English
Adjective
(
en adjective)
Furnished with a pike; ending in a point; peaked; pointed
Describing a dive in which the knees are kept straight, but the body is bent at a right-angle at the hips
Verb
(head)
(pike)
Anagrams
*