rink
See also: Rink
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English rink, renk, from Old English rinc (“man, warrior, hero”), from Proto-Germanic *rankiz (“upright man”), from Proto-Germanic *rankaz (“straight, upright”), from Proto-Indo-European *reǵ- (“straight, direct”). Cognate with Scots rink, renk (“man, warrior, hero”), Old Saxon rink (“man”), Old Norse rekkr (“a straight or upright man”), Old English ranc (“proud, noble, valiant”). More at rank.
Etymology 2
From Middle English rink, rynk, variation of Middle English ring (“ring”). Compare Low German rink (“ring, circle”), Middle High German rinc (“a ring, circle”).
Noun
rink (plural rinks)
- (Britain dialectal) A ring; a circle.
- A sheet of ice prepared for playing certain sports, such as hockey or curling.
- We played hockey all winter until the rink melted.
- A surface for roller skating.
- A building housing an ice rink.
- (curling) A team in a competition.
- The Schmirler rink won the Silver Broom.
Descendants
- Portuguese: rinque
Translations
sheet of ice prepared for playing certain sports
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surface for roller skating
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Manx
Synonyms
Derived terms
- rinkagh
Westrobothnian
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *rinkaną.
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