it's not used in the US that I'm aware of, but I can provide this:

tickety-boo - colloq.

[Etym. obscure: perh. f. Hindi thik hai all right; cf. also ticket n.1 9.]
In order, correct, satisfactory.

1939 N. Streatfeild Luke 186 Things ought to have shaped right.+ Couldn't have looked more tickety-boo. 1947 Amer. N. & Q. Sept. 94/1 Lord Mountbatten, now Governor General of India, is credited in the New York Times Magazine (June 22, 1947, p. 45) with ‘giving currency’ to the phrase ‘tickety-boo’ (or ‘tiggerty-boo’). This Royal Navy term for ‘okay’ is derived from the Hindustani. 1954 ‘G. Carr’ Death under Snowdon xi. 143 ‘All tiggity-boo.’ ‘TiggityI? Never mind, Sergeant. Go on.’ ‘Everything's jake, sir.’ 1957 J. Braine Room at Top xxi. 179 Everything was tickety-boo again. 1960 D. Fearon Murder-on-Thames xviii. 168 ‘I never killed Mr. Evans either’. ‘Then that's all ticketty-boo.’ 1977 Listener 7 Apr. 450/3 Attempting vainly to get everything tickety-boo for the Big Day. 1981 S. Rushdie Midnight's Children i. 97 Everything's in fine fettle, don't you agree? Tickety-boo, we used to say.


ticket - 9. slang. a. The correct thing; what is wanted, expected, or fashionable; esp. in phr. that's the ticket.