Verb
schlick (third-person singular simple present schlicks, present participle schlicking, simple past and past participle schlicked)
Alternative form of shlick
After Schlick, a string of composers developed German lute music: Hans Judenkünig (c.1445–50 1526), the Neusidler family (particularly Hans Neusidler (c.1508/9 1563)) and others. Source: Internet
After working as a legal secretary in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, she married Edwin Schlick in May 1944, and moved to the Schlick farm in St. Martin, Minnesota. Source: Internet
Schlick had held a neo-Kantian position, but later converted, via Carnap's 1928 book Der logische Aufbau der Welt—that is, The Logical Structure of the World—which became Vienna Circle's "bible", Aufbau. Source: Internet
See Moritz Schlick, "The future Of philosophy", in The Linguistic Turn, Richard Rorty, ed, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), pp 43-53. Source: Internet
Meanwhile, back in Vienna, Moritz Schlick was murdered in 1936. Source: Internet
Professor Moritz Schlick was killed by a former student while ascending the steps of the University for a class. Source: Internet