Spick-and-span
adj ·Uncommon ·Advanced level
Definitions
- 1 Clean, spotless. idiomatic
"I mopped up the kitchen floor so it was spick-and-span."
- 1 completely neat and clean wordnet
- 2 conspicuously new wordnet
Antonyms
All antonymsExample
More examples"Keep the bathroom spick-and-span."
Etymology
From spick-and-span-new (literally “new as a recently made spike and chip of wood”) (1570s), from spick (“nail”, variant of spike) + Middle English span-new (“very new”) (from circa 1300 until 1800s), from Old Norse span-nyr, from spann (“chip”) (cognate to Old English spón, English spoon, due to spoons once being made of wood) + nyr (“new”) (cognate to Old English nīewe, English new). Imitation of Dutch spiksplinternieuw (literally “spike-splinter new”), for a freshly built ship. Observe that fresh woodchips are firm and light (if from light wood), but decay and darken rapidly, hence the origin of the term.
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.