Wiktionary
a. (context colloquial English) fussy, petty
Wikipedia
Tic Tac (officially styled as "tic tac") is a brand of small, hard mints, manufactured by the Italian confectioner Ferrero, and available in a variety of flavors in over 100 countries.
Tic Tacs were first produced in 1969. They are usually sold in small transparent plastic boxes with a flip-action living hinge lid. Originally, Tic Tacs were dyed specific colors for different flavors. In many countries, the transparent plastic boxes are colored but the actual Tic Tac pieces are white.
Tic Tac is a 1997 Swedish thriller film directed by Daniel Alfredson and written by Hans Renhäll, about various people involved in small crime during one day and night in Stockholm. The film won the Guldbagge Award for best film and was Sweden's submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, but failed to be nominated.
Some critics have called the film "a Swedish Pulp Fiction".
Nana Kwaku Okyere Duah aka Tic Tac is an award-winning hiplife musician originally from Kwamo, a suburb in the Ashanti Region in Ghana.
Tic Tac is a brand of small, hard candy.
Tic tac or Tic Tac may also refer to:
- Tic-tac, a signalling method used by bookmakers
- Tic Tac (cocktail), a mixture of orange juice, orange flavored vodka, and Red Bull. Created in Portland, Oregon at The Silver Dollar.
- Tic Tac (film), a 1997 Swedish thriller
- Tic Tac (musician), a Ghanaian hiplife musician
- Tic tac bass, a method of playing baritone guitar
- Tick! Tack!, a visual novel by Navel
- Tic&Tac, an album by the jazz fusion band Area
- A Latinized foreign language form the onomatopoeia, "tick tock" (disambiguation)
- Tíck Táck, a national liquor of El Salvador listed on List of national liquors
Tic Tac is a Chilean telenovela produced by TVN. It was written by Jorge Marchant Lazcano, Perla Devoto, Maité Chapero and Jimmy Daccarett. Directed by María Eugenia Rencoret.
The soundtrack of the soap opera was based primarily on the album Tribute to Queen, featuring covers of songs by the group as interpreted by Latin artists Illya Kuryaki & The Valderramas, Soda Stereo, Molotov, Fito Paez and Aterciopelados.