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Licky vs Flicky - What's the difference?

licky | flicky |

As adjectives the difference between licky and flicky

is that licky is prone to licking while flicky is easily flicked; thus, light and fast.

licky

English

Adjective

(er)
  • Prone to licking.
  • * 1981 , Don Bannister, Long day at Shiloh
  • ...but she gives you the feeling all the time that she's bony that's it bony and if she does fancy it she sure as hell don't show it get a lickier kiss from Granny Coombs than I do offen her all that Methodis' stuff I guess
  • * 2003 , Michael Wordsmiff, James Baggit and the Storyteller's Ring - Page 13
  • *:He was a proper dog; a great, woolly, lolloping beast with huge paddy paws, a waggy tail and a very licky tongue.
  • * 2007 , Augusten Burroughs, Possible Side Effects : True Stories - Page 25
  • *:As soon as the dog was safely enclosed within the area of our legs, it became happy and licky . He ran to one then the other. Then he sat on the floor and watched us watching him.
  • See also

    * licky-licky

    flicky

    English

    Adjective

    (er)
  • (slang) Easily flicked; thus, light and fast
  • She got a new, flicky haircut.
  • * {{quote-news, 2009, January 15, David Pogue, Tech Shows, and Writers, Uninspired, New York Times citation
  • , passage=The software is fast, fun and flicky , and you can master it in six minutes. }}