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tchotchke

American  
[chahch-kuh] / ˈtʃɑtʃ kə /
Or chotchke

noun

Slang.
  1. an inexpensive souvenir, trinket, or ornament.


Usage

What does tchotchke mean? A tchotchke is a small, cheap, ornamental trinket or souvenir; a knickknack. Tchotchke is taken from Yiddish, a dialect of German based on Hebrew. It has several English spellings, including chotchke, tchachke, and chachki. In Yiddish, it is also sometimes used as a term for a young girl or pretty woman. Example: My mother can’t go on vacation without coming back with a few tchotchkes.

Etymology

Origin of tchotchke

First recorded in 1965–70, from Yiddish tshatshke, from Polish czaczko “bibelot, knickknack” (now obsolete; compare modern cacko with same sense, originally dialect); of expressive origin

Explanation

A tchotchke is a small, decorative object that's not valuable or precious. When you travel to a foreign country, you might buy some tchotchkes to give as gifts to your friends back home. A tchotchke is some kind of trinket or bauble, like inexpensive jewelry or the prize you get in a cereal box. Less often, tchotchke is used to mean "pretty girl or woman." The word comes, via Yiddish, from a Slavic root, and over the years it's been spelled in numerous different ways. When you pronounce tchotchke, the first t is silent.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing tchotchke

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Or consider a tchotchke that is intended to help decorate a home.

From Los Angeles Times • Dec. 20, 2024

The “This Is Fine” dog by KC Green was a going-away gift from a former colleague, and it’s the perfect desk tchotchke.

From The Verge • Jan. 27, 2022

“There is no limit to how many tchotchke things you can own,” said Annie Auchincloss, the home buyer for the MoMA Design Store in Manhattan.

From Seattle Times • Aug. 24, 2021

Decades of high school lit seminars, let alone the gradual opening of the playgoing class’s eyes to the world’s inequities and terrors, have transformed it from an enigmatic museum piece into an existential tchotchke.

From New York Times • May 7, 2021

Particularly when I remember that I’m one of the ancient dusty people, filed away like some worthless tchotchke.

From "Water for Elephants" by Sara Gruen