Originally I was going to post this in Sõnad, mida hiljuti õppisid thread, then in the Küsimus eesti keele kohta or Eesti keele kohvik threads when that didn't work, but due to the SQL error it seems I can no longer post in any of those threads now, so I'm making a new thread for this little word.
So I came across kõpsikud in a book I was reading. I know that means some kind of shoe/footwear. (That's why I was going to post in the thread Sõnad, mida hiljuti õppisid - I've learned at least that much about what it means.)
But, I'm not sure how specific it is (footwear in general? women's heels?), and I can't find it in any of my dictionaries.
The plural is kõpsikud, I suppose the singular should be kõpsik, but I've only encountered the plural.
Well, in the context where I found it, it seems to mean a woman's high-heeled shoes, and a google search comes up with photos of those as well.* So I don't know if it refers only to high-heeled shoes, fancy shoes, shoes that make a kõps-kõps-kõps sound (I suppose that would be women's heels too), or footwear more generally.
These are kõpsikud:
It's not really important for me to know what it means other than "some kind of footwear" and I suspect it's the type of women's heels that make a loud noise or ones similar to that, but I'm rather bored right now and unable to post in other threads at the moment, so... this post happened.
*The google search came up with several examples of "kõpsikud jalga," which seemed encouraging, but then, as if placed there purely to confuse me, also an example of "kõpsikud ninna". Seems that one was intended entirely to be weird ("Värvi üleni end ära! Kittel selga, vanaema trussikud pähe, kõpsikud ninna ja minek! Kes tahab võib endale kas või peldikupoti pähe monteerida!" - totally not the most useful example to encounter when looking for context that will help to understand what a word means, but it gave me a good laugh when I read the whole sentence after clicking on the link because in the Google search results it didn't show enough context to make that clear, and it actually did make me start to doubt for a moment whether my understanding of it being a type of shoe was right. I mean, really, kõpsikud ninna?