It is clear that ick comes from icky but at this point the Oxford English Dictionary throws up its hands in helplessness and says ‘origin uncertain’. However, the example sentences show that icky is a word of the jazz scene in America in the 1930s and describes music that is over-sweet and sentimental, music that a true lover of swing jazz despises. The suggestion is that it was pretend baby talk meaning ‘little’.
ZG: 7
There is a lot of discussion about the ick among the younger generation, although their elders probably prefer to talk about a real turn-off.
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