Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word
sticky. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
sticky, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
sticky in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
sticky you have here. The definition of the word
sticky will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
sticky, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
From stick + -y.
Pronunciation
Adjective
sticky (comparative stickier, superlative stickiest)
- Tending to stick; able to adhere via the drying of a viscous substance.
Is this tape sticky enough to stay on that surface?
2016 June 5, Thomas Manch, “CuriousCity: What happens to my library books when I return them?”, in Stuff, archived from the original on 2019-05-04:Particularly sticky books are cleaned with methylated spirits.
- Difficult, awkward.
This is a sticky situation. We could be in this for weeks if we're not careful.
1989 December 24, Abe Rybeck, “Liberation Without Permission, Pleasure Without Apology”, in Gay Community News, volume 17, number 24, page 5:GCN is not just another clipboard of polite press releases. GCN is the sticky questions, the sweet moments, and the dirty stories that make up our lives.
2020 June 25, Tegan Bennett Daylight, “My mother taught me the joy of reading. I remember her through books”, in Katharine Viner, editor, The Guardian, London: Guardian News & Media, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2023-05-27:Among the books Mum brought me to read when I was a child were The Secret Garden and A Little Princess, as well as their author Frances Hodgson Burnett's smash hit, Little Lord Fauntleroy. I haven't met an adult my age who has read this book but I did so several times. It's a sticky book, guided by that strange Victorian obsession with "the little mother" – the same obsession that Virginia Woolf, a child of Victorian parents, grappled with in her diaries and her fiction. Somehow, though, I learned to overlook the archaic, to be open to the oddnesses of different eras, and to read for something else.
- Of a death: unpleasant, grisly.
2014 September 8, Michael White, “Roll up, roll up! The Amazing Salmond will show a Scotland you won't believe”, in Alan Rusbridger, editor, The Guardian, London: Guardian News & Media, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2022-10-13:Salmond studied medieval Scottish history as well as economics at university so he cannot say he has not had fair warning – it was even more turbulent and bloody than England at that time – and plenty of Scotland's kings and leaders came to a sticky end. If it happens this time, it won't be dull.
- Of weather: hot and windless and with high humidity, so that people feel sticky from sweating.
2008, Robert K. Fitts, Wally Yonamine: The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball:The baby was due in December and the hot, sticky August weather was making Jane uncomfortable.
- Mawkish, sentimental.
1981 December 27, “Robert Bobbie Bob, Inc (personal advertisement)”, in Gay Community News, volume 9, number 23, page 18:Love you and miss you and wish you all the sticky things one wishes at this season for someone one loves.
- (finance) Tending to stay the same; resistant to change.
a sticky price; sticky wages
- (computing, informal, of a setting) Persistent.
We should make the printing direction sticky so the user doesn't have to keep setting it.
- (computing, of a window) Appearing on all virtual desktops.
- (Internet, of threads on a bulletin board) Fixed at the top of the list of topics or threads so as to keep it in view.
- (Internet, of a website) Compelling enough to keep visitors from leaving.
A woman has come to me with the complaint that her website is not sticky: 70% of the visits last 30 seconds or less.
- (informal) Resembling or characteristic of a stick.
What's something that is brown and sticky? A stick
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
able or likely to stick
- Armenian: կպչուն (hy) (kpčʻun)
- Asturian: pegañosu
- Bikol Central: mapulot (bcl)
- Bulgarian: леплив (bg) (lepliv)
- Catalan: enganxós, apegalós (ca)
- Cebuano: pilit
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 黏 (zh) (nián)
- Dutch: kleverig (nl)
- Esperanto: please add this translation if you can
- Estonian: kleepuv
- Finnish: tarttuva (fi), tahmea (fi)
- French: collant (fr), gluant (fr), poisseux (fr)
- Galician: pegañento (gl), pegañoso, apegadizo
- German: stickig (de), klebrig (de)
- Greek:
- Ancient: γλίσχρος (glískhros)
- Hungarian: ragadós (hu), ragacsos (hu), tapadós (hu), öntapadó (hu)
- Icelandic: klístraður
- Indonesian: lengket (id)
- Ingrian: tarttuva
- Irish: greamaitheach
- Italian: vischioso
- Japanese: ベタベタする (betabeta suru)
- Khiamniungan Naga: yàpyàpkò
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Latin: viscidus
- Latvian: lipīgs
- Maori: ngingita, kūpiapia
- Marathi: चिकट (cikaṭ)
- Norwegian: klissete
- Old English: clibbor
- Ottoman Turkish: یاپشقان (yapışkan)
- Plautdietsch: bakrich
- Polish: lepki (pl)
- Portuguese: grudento (pt), pegajoso (pt)
- Romanian: lipicios (ro)
- Russian: ли́пкий (ru) (lípkij), кле́йкий (ru) (kléjkij)
- Scottish Gaelic: leanailteach
- Spanish: pegajoso (es), adherente (es), adherible
- Swedish: klibbig (sv), kladdig (sv), kletig (sv)
- Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Turkish: yapışkan (tr)
- Ukrainian: липкий (lypkyj), липучий (lypučyj)
- Vietnamese: dính (vi)
- Volapük: kleböfik (vo)
- Yiddish: קלעפּיק (klepik), קלעפּעדיק (klepedik)
|
potentially difficult to escape from
appearing on all virtual desktops
of threads on a bulletin board
that keeps visitors from leaving it
See also
Noun
sticky (countable and uncountable, plural stickies)
- A sticky note, such as a post-it note.
Her desk is covered with yellow stickies.
- (Internet) A discussion thread fixed at the top of the list of topics or threads so as to keep it in view.
- (manufacturing) A small adhesive particle found in wastepaper.
- (Australia, colloquial) A sweet dessert wine.
- (slang) Sticky-icky; marijuana, especially the sticky, resin-covered buds.
2006, Noire , Thug-A-Licious: An Urban Erotic Tale, New York, N.Y.: One World, Ballantine Books, →ISBN, page 268:We'd smoked some nice sticky that night and fucked with some Erk and Jerk too, so my head was still cloudy when Pimp came in the room and said get up.
2011 April 12, “Made Men”performed by Rick Ross:Still smoking sticky, it ain't no other option / Not for made niggas, and I'm never stopping
2014, Jagada Chambers, Based on a True Story:As drunk as I was, all I could think about was getting some sticky down my lungs.
- (obsolete, slang, uncountable) Wax.
Translations
small adhesive particle found in wastepaper
Verb
sticky (third-person singular simple present stickies, present participle stickying, simple past and past participle stickied)
- (Internet, bulletin boards, transitive) to fix a thread at the top of the list of topics or threads so as to keep it in view.
Translations
to fix a thread at the top of the list
References
- “sticky”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.