different between licky vs lickt

licky

English

Etymology

lick +? -y

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?ki

Adjective

licky (comparative lickier, superlative lickiest)

  1. Prone to licking.
    • 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

licky From the web:

  • what licky mean
  • licky what does that mean
  • what is licky boom boom down
  • what are licky pokemon
  • lucky numbers
  • what are licky mats
  • what a lucky man he was
  • lucky bamboo


lickt

English

Verb

lickt

  1. (obsolete) simple past tense and past participle of lick

lickt From the web:

  • what does patrician mean
  • what does the word patrician mean
  • definition patrician
  • def of patrician
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