ticky-tacky

noun

Etymology

Probably reduplication of tacky. Apparently coined by Malvina Reynolds in the early 1960s (see quotation, below).

Definitions

  1. Cheap, low-quality building material, especially as that used to make conventional…

    Cheap, low-quality building material, especially as that used to make conventional suburban housing of a uniform design.

    • And the boys go into business, and marry and raise a family / In boxes made of ticky-tacky, and they all look just the same.
  2. Made of this material

    Made of this material; cheaply built, of low quality.

    • My first impression was that Phoenix was another American Dream (a la L.A.) come true—ticky-tacky tract housing complexes and mini-malls stretching boundlessly into the flat desert horizon.
  3. Inferior, minor, trivial.

    • It almost seems that major discipline problems take care of themselves; it is the day-to-day little ticky-tacky issues that bind and scratch and itch until you find that you are boxed in with a class that you can no longer control.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for ticky-tacky. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA