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ticky-tacky

American  
[tik-ee-tak-ee] / ˈtɪk iˌtæk i /
Sometimes ticky-tack

adjective

  1. shoddy and unimaginatively designed; flimsy and dull.

    a row of new, ticky-tacky bungalows.

  2. tacky.


noun

  1. ticky-tacky material or something made of it, especially housing.

Etymology

Origin of ticky-tacky

First recorded in 1960–65; gradational compound based on tacky 2

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.

“It seems kind of ticky-tacky, but it helps with my mental state to think of myself that way ... I survived something that many people haven’t.”

From Los Angeles Times • Jan. 15, 2025

They are hulking cubes and, no matter how much developers splash on colorful paint and add bits of ticky-tacky, they all look as if they came from the same box of Legos.

From Seattle Times • Feb. 17, 2023

It’s far more emotionally fulfilling to scream raw-throated at a zebra than to dwell on ticky-tacky technicalities and technique.

From Washington Post • Feb. 13, 2023

In the 1950s, inexpensive "cottages" sprang up all over the Bay Area, providing what folksinger Malvina Reynolds called "little boxes made of ticky-tacky."

From Salon • Oct. 17, 2020

“Certain Prey” may be ticky-tacky, but Mr. Harmon knows how to deliver what many of the 19 million people who watch “NCIS” every week are looking for.

From New York Times • Nov. 4, 2011

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