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Picky vs Persnickety - What's the difference?

picky | persnickety |

As adjectives the difference between picky and persnickety

is that picky is fussy; particular; demanding to have things just right while persnickety is fastidious or fussy.

As a noun picky

is a picture.

picky

English

Adjective

(er)
  • Fussy; particular; demanding to have things just right.
  • I am very picky about the way my kitchen works.

    Synonyms

    * fussy * particular * anal retentive * finicky * pedantic * choosy * See also

    Noun

    (pickies)
  • (informal) A picture.
  • * 1988 , Penguin Books, paperback edition, page 44
  • And who knows, I might do a few pickies of you - fully clothed, needless to say.

    Alternative forms

    * piccy

    Synonyms

    * pic

    persnickety

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (US) Fastidious or fussy.
  • Obsessive about mundane details, demanding for precision.
  • *1905 , Katherine M. Yates, At the Door: A Tale to Read Both on the Lines and Between , K. M. Yates & Company, page 7:
  • *:Marjorie glanced up and down the long street. “Well, I never in my life saw so many different kinds of houses!” she exclaimed. “Aren’t they funny! Why, they look almost like people. Look at that little persnickety one over there — the white, white one with the green, green blinds — doesn’t it look exactly like —”
  • *1914 July 3, William H. Bowers, “The Use of ‘Tempest.’”, letter to the editor, in The Dial: A Semi-Monthly Journal of Literary Criticism, Discussion, and Information , The Henry O. Shepard Co., volume LVII, page 47:
  • *:I have just read the article in your issue for May 16 on dialectic English. The word tempest recalls the surprise I felt at the beginning of three years' residence on Cape Cod to hear the word used commonly as an exact synonym for thunderstorm.
  • *:Persnickety'' I have been accustomed to use in the sense attached to ''perjinkety , that is, over-fastidious. I do not know how the word was acquired or how common its use is.
  • *1919 , Gertrude Harding, The Higher Aspect of Nursing , W. B. Saunders Company, pages 180–181:
  • *:Her free and easy association with her fellow nurses is prone to break down her womanly reserve and natural modesty. Her assiduity in clinging to ideals of modest begins to abate as a result. She is inclined to think she has been too “persnickety ;” that this is unnecessary when one understands “the naturalness of the physical body.” She wonders what is the use. And forthwith the foundation is laid for Moral Lenity .
  • Synonyms

    * See also