Dictionary
knick-knack
noun
A small ornament of minor value.
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The word 'knick-knack' is correct and can be used in written English.
It is often used to refer to small, decorative objects or trinkets. Example: The mantelpiece was cluttered with various knick-knacks, including ceramic figurines, souvenir shot glasses, and antique clocks.
Exact(48)
Boutiquey knick-knack shops came in alongside fusty dollar stores.
Lionel, I say, you're a knick-knack and bric-a-brac maniac.
Paul O. Zelinsky, author of "Knick-Knack Paddywhack!" Sept. 30 at 3 30 p.m. Free.
On a trip to Malacca, on the west coast of Malaysia, I stopped at a knick-knack shop in Chinatown.
The film, "Knick-knack,"about a snowman trapped in a snow globe, is now considered a classic of 3D animation.
Think local On Sundays San Telmo's main artery, Calle Defensa, fills up with a craft and knick-knack market.
Similar(12)
"In 1989, Pixar made a short film called Knick Knack in 3D.
Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith used Cocker's track on their playground-inspired track, Knick Knack Patty Wack.
Her knick-knack-filled Berkshire home has now become a regular, if unlikely, stop on the Beat trail.
A grimly propulsive tale leavened with bleak humor, "Knick Knack Paddy Whack" follows the entwined stories of Patrick Scully and his sort-of girlfriend, Francesca Kelly.
In "Knick Knack Paddy Whack," an unlucky toss of the dice is all it takes to blight a life of reasonable promise.
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