A man that I adore (he knows who he is.....) has used used the above expression. Poor man's in a panic cos he's had a few days alone & no doubt his casa is a tip.
Can anyone tell us where that originated?
"Spick" because most cleaning staff were South American latinos, or ... "Spicks"
"Span" because "Spick" is a term of endearment which "spans" the geographical and cultural divide between the United States, and their much loved South American immigrant population.
My Dear Salla, me, being of very high interlect can tell you the origin of what you ask.
The phrase is derived from two archaic words: spick, which was a spike or nail and span, which meant "wood chip." When a ship was polished and new, it was called "spick and span," meaning every nail and piece of wood was untarnished. The phrase originally meant "brand new" but is now used to indicate cleanliness.