Ticky Meaning in English
word
ˈtɪki
TIK-ee
ˈtɪki
TIK-ee
释义
"Ticky" usually means something is sticky, like glue, or can refer to someone who is very fussy or picky about small details.
用法与细微差别
Very informal, not standard; mostly heard in American English, sometimes among children or in regional speech. As an adjective for substances, means physically sticky. For people, implies being picky or overly concerned with small things. Rarely used in formal writing.
Spanish: pegajoso - quisquillosoPortuguese (BR): grudento - exigente (pessoa)Portuguese (PT): pegajoso - picuinhasChinese (Simplified): 粘黏的 - 爱挑剔的Chinese (Traditional): 黏黏的 - 愛挑剔的Hindi: चिपचिपा - नकचढ़ाArabic: لزج - دقيق جداًBengali: লেপটে থাকা - খুঁতখুঁতেRussian: липкий - придирчивыйJapanese: ベタベタする - 細かいことにうるさいVietnamese: dính - kén chọnKorean: 끈적거리는 - 까다로운Turkish: yapışkan - titizUrdu: چپچپا - نکتہ چینIndonesian: lengket - cerewet (terlalu teliti)
例句
This table is ticky from the spilled juice.
basic
My hands feel ticky after eating candy.
basic
That glue is very ticky.
basic
He’s being so ticky about where each fork goes.
natural
That sticker is kind of ticky if you touch the back.
natural
Sorry, I get really ticky about messy rooms.
natural