poate k pink nu e. eu zic kitch tu zici de k.k.t la urma urmei nu prea vad diferenta
"Kenneth G. Wilson (1923?). The Columbia Guide to Standard American English. 1993.
kitsch (n.), kitschy (adj.)
The noun, meaning "cheap, tawdry, tasteless things, pretentious, junky, but po****r," and the adjective, meaning "of shoddy, pretentious character or quality," are both Standard; they apply particularly to furniture, architecture, and other designs that unjustifiably pretend to artistic merit. In German and Yiddish, kitsch means "trash," especially "gaudy trash." American English probably borrowed the word from Yiddish rather than German. See YIDDISH WORDS IN AMERICAN ENGLISH."