a. Obs. Also Flandrikan. [f. prec. + -IC + -AN; but prob. an etymologizing alteration of FLANDERKIN.] = FLEMISH.

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1800.  J. Milner, Lett. Prebendary (1813), 165. John Hooper, a Cistercian monk, who abandoning his religious order and state of continency, to both of which he was bound by solemn vows, married a Flandrican woman.

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1824.  MacCulloch, Highl. & W. Isles Scotl., I. 57. It is in vain to say that this style [of architecture], which has no proper name, is neither Greek, nor Gothic, nor Moorish, nor of any assignable manner, or to affect to despise it as Tudesque or Flandrikan.

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