tchotchke

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

First attested in American English in 1964, from Yiddish טשאַטשקע (tshatshke, trinket), from Polish cacko; compare Russian ца́цка (cácka).[1]

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

tchotchke (plural tchotchkes)

  1. (Canada, US) A trinket.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:trinket
    • 1998 Apr, Mark Rakatansky, A/Partments, in Assemblage 35, page 58,
      I am a child of modernism [...] As such I have inherited a distrust of the tchotchke, which I have still [...]
    • 1999 Aug 8, Jesse McKinley, The Avant-Garde: Follow That Backpack, in The New York Times, page 5.16
      With limited cash and a thirst for uncommon sights, backpackers have pushed into challenging territory well before the big-money resorts or tchotchke merchants.
    • 2006, Jack Sullivan, Hitchcock's Music, Yale University Press, page 244:
      Once again Hitchcock overturned the convention that music must remain subliminally in the background of a film: [...] in its quiet moments, it roams grimly wherever it pleases, investing the most banal images—a toy, [...] a tchotchke of folding hands—with dread.
  2. (Canada, US, dated) An attractive woman or girl.
    Synonym: bimbo

See also

References

  1. Douglas Harper (2001–2023), tchotchke”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.

Further reading

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