“Lickety” is an old-fashioned, informal word that usually shows up in phrases like “lickety-split”, meaning very fast or in a hurry.

  • “Lickety-split”as quickly as possible

  • “Lickety-cut” or “lickety-click” (less common) → also meant “fast” in older usage

The word itself doesn’t have a standalone meaning—it’s mainly part of playful, rhythmic expressions in American English from the 19th century.

Origins

  • First recorded in the 19th century (early 1800s, U.S.).

  • It’s thought to be imitative / playful, part of a trend in English of making rhyming or rhythmical nonsense words (like higgledy-piggledy, helter-skelter).

  • The “lick” part may come from the older slang “at a good lick,” meaning “at a fast pace.”

Common expressions with lickety

  1. Lickety-split (most common) → extremely fast, right away.

    • “She ran lickety-split down the road.”

  2. Lickety-cut (19th century, rare now) → also very fast.

  3. Lickety-brindle (dialect, rare) → meant in a rush / hastily.

  4. At a lickety pacemoving quickly.

Tone / Register

  • It’s colloquial, playful, a bit old-fashioned.

  • You’d find it in children’s books, cowboy tales, or someone trying to sound “folksy.”

  • Rarely used in serious writing today, but it pops up in nostalgic or humorous contexts.

👉 So in short: “lickety” is an intensifier that makes “fast” sound even more vivid, usually tied to speed, urgency, or suddenness.