dink
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dɪŋk/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪŋk
Etymology 1
Imitative. Originally US. Attested since the 1930s.
Noun
dink (plural dinks)
- (tennis) A soft drop shot.
- 2018 February 12, Ava Wallace, “New mother Serena Williams returns to tennis, with a little rust and plenty to learn”, in Washington Post:
- But what I saw is she still has that sense of, ‘Okay, I need to hit a dink shot, I need to come with power now, I need to change up my serve not for a flat one, but a big kick.’
-
- (soccer) A light chip; a chipped pass or shot
Verb
dink (third-person singular simple present dinks, present participle dinking, simple past and past participle dinked)
- (tennis) To play a soft drop shot.
- (soccer) To chip lightly, to play a light chip shot.
- The forward dinked the ball over the goalkeeper to score his first goal of the season.
- 2010 December 28, Kevin Darlin, “West Brom 1 - 3 Blackburn”, in BBC:
- But the visitors started the game in stunning fashion when Morten Gamst Pedersen dinked forward a clever looping pass and Kalinic beat the offside trap, surged into the box and beautifully placed the ball past goalkeeper Scott Carson.
Etymology 2
Origin unknown. Attested since the 1930s.
Noun
dink (plural dinks)
- (Australia, colloquial) A ride on the crossbar or handlebars of a bicycle.
- I gave him a dink on my bike.
Verb
dink (third-person singular simple present dinks, present participle dinking, simple past and past participle dinked)
- (Australia, colloquial) To carry someone on a pushbike: behind, on the crossbar or on the handlebar.
- 1947, John Lehmann (editor), The Penguin New Writing, Issue 30, page 103,
- I didn't like them at all ; only the lame one who used to let me dink him home on his bicycle.
- 1947, John Lehmann (editor), The Penguin New Writing, Issue 30, page 103,
Etymology 3
Origin unknown. Attested since the 1960s. Compare Chink, a derogatory term for a Chinese person.
Noun
dink (plural dinks)
- (US, military slang, derogatory, dated) A North Vietnamese soldier.
- 1989, Craig Roberts and Charles W. Sasser, The Walking Dead: A Marine's Story of Vietnam, page 197:
- Our job was to go out on night patrols and stay behind to zap any dinks we caught sneaking back to their holes at dawn.
-
Etymology 4
Initialism. Originally US. Attested since the 1980s.
Etymology 5
See dinkum.
Adjective
dink
- (Australia, New Zealand) Honest, fair, true.
- (Australia, New Zealand) Genuine, proper, fair dinkum.
Adverb
dink (not comparable)
- (Australia, New Zealand) Honestly, truly.
- 2006, Pip Wilson, Face in the Street, page 323:
- Are you The Banjo? Fair dink no bull? Oh, sorry, lady, I mean ... dinki-di?
-
Noun
dink (uncountable)
- (Australia, Northern England) Hard work, especially one's share of a task.
- (historical, dated) A soldier from Australia or New Zealand, a member of the ANZAC forces during the First World War.
Etymology 6
Origin unknown. Attested since the late nineteenth century.
Noun
dink (plural dinks)
- (Canada, US, colloquial, slang) A penis.
- 2004, Brian Francis, Fruit: A Novel about a Boy and his Nipples, page 2:
- The hair on my legs is softer than the hair around my dink, but it still grosses me out.
-
- (Canada, US, colloquial, slang) A foolish person, a despised person. [from 1960s]
- 1997, Chris Gudgeon, You’re Not as Good as You Think, page 13:
- […] he was a dink, and all the money, fame, and power in the world wouldn't change that one simple fact.
-
Etymology 7
Origin unknown. Attested in English and in Scots since the sixteenth century.
Adjective
dink (not comparable)
- (archaic or dialectal) Finely dressed, elegant; neat.
- 1821, Walter Scott, Kenilworth, page 249:
- All these floated along with the immense tide of population, whom mere curiosity had drawn together; and where the mechanic in his leathern apron, elbowed the dink and dainty dame, his city mistress […]
-
Etymology 8
See dinq.
Afrikaans
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dəŋk/
Verb
dink (present dink, present participle denkende, past dag or dog, past participle gedag or gedog or gedink)
- to think
- 1939, Jaarboek, page 44:
- Ons het gedag dat die behoefte om te pleit om 'n dergelike samewerikng […]
- 1951, Suid-Afrikaanse Hofverslae, volume 3, page 79:
- […] ek het gedag dat met my man se dood dit sal nou tot niet geraak het.
- 1993, A Grammar of Afrikaans, Bruce Donaldson, page 223:
- Hy het gedag/gedog/gedink ek sou eers môre kom.
- 1939, Jaarboek, page 44:
Usage notes
- The regular past form het gedink can be used in all senses.
- The irregular past forms dag, dog; het gedag, het gedog can only be used in the sense of “to believe, to reckon (that)”, but not in the sense of “to think about, to ponder”.
Derived terms
- bedink
- nadink
Scots
Etymology 1
Origin unknown. Attested in Old Scots circa 1500.
Verb
dink (third-person singular present dinks, present participle dinkin, past dinkt, past participle dinkt)
- to deck
- to dress neatly
Verb
dink (third-person singular present dinks, present participle dinkin, past dinkt, past participle dinkt)
- to dent, to bruise
References
- “dink” in the Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries.