Monday 14 June 2021

A Fertile Site

If I can't sleep, I most often think about patterns amongst words. For example, what are all the monosyllabic words that rhyme with "ush"? Last night, I was thinking about words that have "fusion" as their root. I came up with confusion, transfusion, effusion, diffusion, infusion but I decided to look at what a new site that I discovered yesterday had to say on the matter. As it turned out, a lot! The site is called English - Word Information. The information I was looking for was contained within eight pages with a heading as shown in Figure 1.


Figure 1

The amount of detail contained on this topic is quite impressive. Let's look at the first two entries:
affuse (verb), affuses; affused; affusing
To pour upon; to sprinkle; such as when using a liquid.
affusion (uh FYOO zhuhn) (s) (noun), affusions (pl)
1. The pouring on of water or another liquid on a person's head, as in the rite of baptism: Lester's young son was having an affusion as a religious celebration that he is a Christian.
2. The pouring of a natural fluid on the body or any of its parts for therapeutic purposes: David was getting a cold affusion by a doctor in order to reduce the temperature of his fever and to calm his nervous condition.
Well, I wasn't aware that affuse and affusion were words and this blog's spell checker flags their presence as errors. Clearly, they are not in the spell checker's database and thus are relatively uncommon. 

One of the interesting features of the site is the use of cartoons to reinforce the meaning of certain words. For example, take the widely used word effusive for which there are three cartoons included. Figure 3 shows one of them:

Figure 3

In the eight pages referred to, there are interesting words to be discovered e.g. futilitarian. The word seems particularly apropos the current chaos that envelops the world.
futilitarian (s) (noun), futilitarians (pl)
A person who is convinced that human desires and actions can not be successfully accomplished. 
futilitarian (adjective), more futilitarian, most futilitarian
Referring to an opinion that human activities and desires are incapable of being achieved and so they are not worth attempting: So far one would think that it is a futilitarian idea that people all over the world can live together in peace. 
futilitarianism (s) (noun), futilitarianisms (pl)
The belief that human endeavors or efforts and aspirations are useless and can not be achieved.
There is an accompanying cartoon. See Figure 4.

Figure 4

So getting back to my "fusion" words, I discovered that in addition to confusion, transfusion, effusion, diffusion and infusion, there is:
  • affusion
  • autoinfusion
  • circumfusion
  • hydrodiffusion
  • immunodiffusion
  • interfusion
  • oleoinfusion
  • perfusion
  • profusion
  • refusion
  • suffusion
  • thermodiffusion
  • vividiffussion

I'm familiar with profusion and suffusion but they hadn't sprung to mind earlier. Of course, some of the words are scientific or medical and not common. The spell checker flags circumfusion, oleofusion, thermodiffusion and vividiffusion.

I was led to the site initially by an investigation into words ending in INE that describe animals. A blog that I stumbled upon referred me to the site. There is a unit on words ending in INE, not exclusive to animals, and very informative. See Figure 5.


Figure 5

So overall this is very useful resource for those interested in the English language and those interested in expanding their vocabulary. 

Thursday 10 June 2021

From Blink to Wink: Part 3

 I'm So Tired


I'm so tired, I haven't slept a wink, 
I'm so tired, my mind is on the blink. 
I wonder should I get up and fix myself a drink. 

These lines form the first three lines of The Beatles famous song "I'm So Tired" released in November of 1968. It's a fitting introduction to this post because it features three rhyming words: wink, blink and drink and this post is all about rhymes.


In my Part 1 post, I looked at the following words that rhyme with ink:

bink, blink, brink, chink, cinque, clink, dink, drink, fink, gink, hink

In my Part 2 post, I looked at the following words that rhyme with ink:

inc, jink, kink, klink, link, mink, pink, plink, rink, shrink, sink, skink

What remains are: 

slink, spink, stink, swink, syncthink, twink, winkzinc, zink, zinke

Words in bold are more common and Rhyme Desk provides definitions for these. In Part 3, I'll work through some of the remaining words.

slink: as a verb, this word means to walk or leave quietly, esp. because you do not want to be noticed or are ashamed of something as in "I was so embarrassed that I tried to slink away". In a less negative sense it can mean to move smoothly and quietly with gliding steps, in a stealthy or sensuous manner as in "the fox came slinking through the woods". It can also be used a noun in the sense of a slinking movement or walk as in "she moved with a sensuous slink".


spink: I wasn't aware of this but this word in British English, as a noun, a finch or the sound of a particular bird cry and, as an intransitive verb applied to a finch, it can mean to call, chirp, or make a characteristic sound as in "the chaffinch was spinking in the tree".

The Urban Dictionary gives an altogether different take on the word, namely a person who is part hispanic/part asian, a play off the words "spic" and "chink"

The surname Spink has an interesting history as described in ancestry. Here are some excerpts:
This English name derivers from Middle English spink ‘chaffinch’ (probably of imitative origin), hence a nickname bestowed on account of some fancied resemblance to the bird. You can see how Spink families moved over time by selecting different census years. The Spink family name was found in the USA, the UK, Canada, and Scotland between 1840 and 1920. The most Spink families were found in the UK in 1891. In 1891 there were 1,032 Spink families living in Yorkshire. This was about 44% of all the recorded Spink's in the UK. Yorkshire had the highest population of Spink families in 1891. In 1939, General Labourer and Unpaid Domestic Duties were the top reported jobs for men and women in the UK named Spink. 9% of Spink men worked as a General Labourer and 70% of Spink women worked as an Unpaid Domestic Duties. Some less common occupations for Americans named Spink were Motor Driver and Private Means. Between 1949 and 2004, in the United States, Spink life expectancy was at its lowest point in 1949, and highest in 1992. The average life expectancy for Spink in 1949 was 46, and 69 in 2004.

Spink & Son (established 1666) are an auction and collectibles company known principally for their sales of coins, banknotes, stock and bond certificates and medals. They also deal in philatelic items, wine and spirits, and other collectible items.


stink: needless to say such a common word is involved in a wide number of idiomatic expressions (link) including:

  • a great fuss or ruckus; a lot of trouble as in "My mom raised a stink when the store refused to accept her return without a receipt" or "There's no need to raise a holy stink about this, Eleanor—we'll figure something out."

  • something scandalous, controversial, or especially unpleasant as in "The stink of his association with the corrupt company continues to follow him to this day".

  • to be especially bad, abhorrent, or inferior in quality as in "Your plan stinks, Tom! There's no way it would work!"

  • to be or seem extremely disreputable, suspicious, or corrupt as in "This deal between the company and the mayor's office stinks, if you ask me. I'd be willing to bet that someone's pocket is being lined".

  • extremely drunk, so drunk that one stinks of alcohol as used in the phrase stinking drunk e.g. "If you're going to keep coming home stinking drunk each night, then you can just find somewhere else to live!"

  • a facial expression of unreserved disgust, contempt, disapproval, distrust, or general ill will when used in the phrase the stink eye e.g. "Jonathan, I will not tolerate getting the stink eye from students during class. If you make that face at me again, you're going to the principal's office!" or "Some guy across the bar has been giving me the stink eye since we came in. It must be something to do with my outfit".


The word has historical dimensions as seen in the phrase "The Great Stink". To quote from Wikipedia:

The Great Stink was an event in Central London in July and August 1858 during which the hot weather exacerbated the smell of untreated human waste and industrial effluent that was present on the banks of the River Thames. The problem had been mounting for some years, with an ageing and inadequate sewer system that emptied directly into the Thames. The miasma from the effluent was thought to transmit contagious diseases, and three outbreaks of cholera before the Great Stink were blamed on the ongoing problems with the river.

The smell, and fears of its possible effects, prompted action from the local and national administrators who had been considering possible solutions for the problem. The authorities accepted a proposal from the civil engineer Joseph Bazalgette to move the effluent eastwards along a series of interconnecting sewers that sloped towards outfalls beyond the metropolitan area. Work on high-, mid- and low-level systems for the new Northern and Southern Outfall Sewers started at the beginning of 1859 and lasted until 1875. To aid the drainage, pumping stations were placed to lift the sewage from lower levels into higher pipes. Two of the more ornate stations, Abbey Mills in Stratford and Crossness on the Erith Marshes, with architectural designs from the consultant engineer, Charles Driver, are listed for protection by English Heritage. Bazalgette's plan introduced the three embankments to London in which the sewers ran—the Victoria, Chelsea and Albert Embankments.

Bazalgette's work ensured that sewage was no longer dumped onto the shores of the Thames and brought an end to the cholera outbreaks; his actions are thought to have saved more lives than the efforts of any other Victorian official. His sewer system operates into the 21st century, servicing a city that has grown to a population of over eight million. The historian Peter Ackroyd argues that Bazalgette should be considered a hero of London.

swink: although archaic now, this word once meant, as a verb, to toil or drudge and, as a noun, toil or drudgery. It is the name of an eponymous digital payment system (link):


It is the name of an eponymous movie made in 2006:


In fact, what I found is that swink is a popular name for companies:


It's also a popular surname:


sync: this is an abbreviated term for synchronisation (British) or synchronization (American) and we talk about things being in or out of sync meaning that they reach the same or related stage at the same time (in sync) or at different times (out of sync) e.g. "He's putting himself forward as a president whose ideas are in sync with a nation demanding change" or "She found that the job was out of sync with her principles, and she had to leave".


In technology circles, the term is widely used to mean connecting two electronic devices so that they both have the latest information or files as in "How do I sync my phone to my computer?"


To lip-sync is a reference to performers who lip-sync songs, meaning that they pretend to be singing them when in fact they are just moving their lips e.g. "They could lip-sync as well as the video stars of the 1980s" or "Actors lip-synch the singing".

think: this most common and basic of words has naturally found its way into a myriad of expressions including:

think tank
think big
think twice
think aloud
overthink
think the world of somebody
blue-sky thinking
think outside the box
think nothing of doing something
think something through
think the sun rises and sets on someone
wishful thinking
think ill of someone
think something over
think on something
think fit to do something
thinking cap
think ahead
think aloud


twink: overwhelmingly, the term nowadays is used as gay slang for a young man in his late teens to early twenties whose traits may include: general physical attractiveness; a slim to average build; and a youthful appearance that may belie an older chronological age. The term seems to have arisen in the 1970s. The Internet is awash with photos of twinks so I won't provide any more here.

wink: we thus arrive at the end of my blink to wink journey, although I still have zinc, zink and zinke to cover. 


It is a from of non-verbal communication that has various meanings depending on the context. Here is somebody's take on the meanings of winks (source):

There is a subtle form of communication we all know about, and some of us have even mastered, but do you really even know where it began or what it actually means? The form of communication we’re speaking of is the wink , a non-verbal communication tool that can be used to deliver or exchange any number of messages.A proper wink usually involves eye contact between at least two individuals. The winker simply closes and opens one eye when he has the attention of the intended recipient, thus delivering a covert and implied message. At some point in our lives, we’ve all been winked at and/or delivered one of our own. Depending on the situation, the context changes with the bat of every eye. Which begs the question, what is the proper use of a wink, and where did it come from?Although the exact origin of the wink is unclear, we’ve dug long and hard to find the true meanings behind this subtle gesture. While you may be aware of all the different messages that can be conveyed by winking, it’s important to note that signals are easily crossed. So let’s take a look at a few of the gesture’s most common connotations, that way you know what you’re getting yourself into should you attempt to master the art of winking.
Hello Signal 
Sometimes when you are not able to wave or offer a verbal hello, a quick wink can do the trick. It’s a simple acknowledgement that you’re aware of another’s presence. In instances where formal salutations are unfeasible, a wink ensures that no one gets a disheartening cold shoulder.
Flirtation Signal 
The flirtatious wink is the most frequently attempted wink, and is therefore the most abused. It’s meaning can range from “I find you pleasing to thine eye.” to “Hey, baby. Let’s get out of here.“ Discretion is of the utmost importance when executing a flirty wink.
Secret Shared Knowledge Signal 
From inside jokes to well-kept secrets, this particular wink is very popular. Ideally, it happens so quickly and discreetly that only those “in the know” pick up on it. The danger is that an unintended recipient might witness the gesture. This could make them feel left out, or suspect they’re the butt of the joke.
J/K Signal 
When a joke goes horribly awry, or slides towards the offensive side of things, this wink helps minimize the damage. People even relay this message via text by using a semicolon and closed parenthesis – ;). It simply means “Haha, totally kidding. Obviously.”
Nervous/Involuntary Twitch 
Involuntary twitching isn’t actually a type of wink, but it is responsible for a large amount of wink faux pas. Ill-timed eyelid spasms are easily misconstrued as flirtatious or salutatious winks. Even worse, they make the blundering blinker look like an unskilled winker.
But on a more serious note, eye twitches could be caused by an underlying neurological condition. See a doctor if you experience prolonged twitching. And if you’d like to learn more about the common causes of eye twitches, check out this recent blog post. The bottom line is that this simple facial expression can signify just about anything, as long as it’s shared amongst two or more people operating on the same winking wavelength.

There are numerous expressions involving wink. These include:

  • A nod is as good as a wink to a blind man
  • Blink and you'll miss it.
  • Forty winks.
  • I have not slept one wink.
  • In the blink of an eye.
  • Nod and a wink.
  • Nudge nudge, wink wink
  • On the blink. 

zinc: this is the name given to the chemical element of atomic number 30, a silvery-white metal that is a constituent of brass and is used for coating (galvanizing) iron and steel to protect against corrosion. Zinc is an essential mineral that your body does not make on its own. It aids growth, DNA synthesis, immune function and more. Zinc is essential for cell growth and division, immune function, enzyme reactions, DNA synthesis and protein production. Zinc may effectively reduce inflammation, boost immune health, reduce your risk of age-related diseases, speed wound healing and improve acne symptoms. Risk factors for zinc deficiency include insufficient dietary intake, poor absorption, alcoholism, genetic mutations and old age. Zinc occurs naturally in foods like shellfish, meat, poultry and dairy, and is added to other foods, such as breakfast cereals and wheat flour. Zinc toxicity may cause diarrhea, headache, abdominal cramps and reduced immunity. Most people can obtain their daily dose of zinc through diet alone. Source.


Zink: this word is often just a misspelling of zinc but it is also used as a surname. Here is some information about its use in this sense:
Zink derives from Middle High German zinke ‘peak’, acquired either as a topographic name by someone who lived on or near a crag or on a pointed piece of land or as a nickname for a man with a singularly pointed nose. Compare modern German slang Zinken, meaning ‘hooter’. The same word was used to denote the cornet, although the semantic development is not clear, and the surname may sometimes have been metonymic for a player of this instrument. It was not until the 16th century that the metal zinc was discovered and named (apparently from its jagged appearance in the furnace), so this is unlikely to be the origin of the surname.
Zinke: as well as an association to the surname Zink as an alternative spelling, it can also refer to an old wind instrument like a cornet, of wood or horn, with seven finger-holes. It is pronounced tsing′ke.


Here is some detailed information about the musical instrument:
ZINKE or ZINCKE, also called Cornetto or Cornet à Bouquin (Fr.), is one of the oldest instruments known. It consists of a wooden tube, slightly conical, covered with leather, having six holes for the fingers, and one hole for the thumb on the lower side, while the tone is produced through a cup mouthpiece, similar to that of a trump. Its compass consists of a chromatic scale of a few notes more than two octaves. About the 14th and 15th centuries, when wind-bands gradually assumed a definite design, Zinken were most important instruments. Their powerful toned combined well with that of trombones, and bands consisting mainly of these two kinds of instruments were great favourites both at public fêtes and religious ceremonials. Many ancient writers on music mention it in terms of great praise. Artusi says: 'As to its tone, it resembles the brightness of a sunbeam piercing the darkness, when one hears it among the voices in cathedrals, churches, or chapels.' He further mentions two cornetto players at Venice as great artists on their instruments. Mattheson laments their partial disuse as early as 1739, and says: 'The fine Zinken and trombones, which formerly were considered to be of one family, and equally respected by players and composers, are now seemingly banished from our churches, as if they were useless; especially the Zinke, which, in spite of its harshness, is so penetrating,' etc. Source.

Thus we come to the end of the blink to wink three part series. It's been an interesting exercise.

Tuesday 8 June 2021

From Blink to Wink: Part 2

I'm So Tired

I'm so tired, I haven't slept a wink, 
I'm so tired, my mind is on the blink. 
I wonder should I get up and fix myself a drink. 

These lines form the first three lines of The Beatles famous song "I'm So Tired" released in November of 1968. It's a fitting introduction to this post because it features three rhyming words: wink, blink and drink and this post is all about rhymes.


In Part 1, my previous post, I looked at the following words that rhyme with ink:

bink, blink, brink, chink, cinque, clink, dink, drink, fink, gink, hink

What remains are: 

inc, jink, kink, klink, linkminkpink, plink, rinkshrinksinkskinkslink, spink, stink, swink, syncthink, twink, winkzinc, zink, zinke

Words in bold are more common and Rhyme Desk provides definitions for these. In Part 2, I'll work through some of the remaining words.

inc.: this is an abbreviation for Incorporated : used in the US after the name of a company organised as a legal corporation (a particular type of company) as in "Time Inc. announced it would launch a Greek version of two of its magazines" or "Developer enthusiasm for Apple Inc. increases before every new product launch". 

The term can be used less formally and applied to any enterprise that is well-organised and profit-driven as in "John and his friend Ivan decided to call their tech startup JON-I-VAN-INC.".

The abbreviation can be pronounced in full but it's common enough to say just inc, pronounced in the same way as ink. In Internet slang, INC means incoming as in an attack is imminent in the world of gaming. It can also be an abbreviation for including.

There is a good summary of the various meanings of inc. at the site shown in Figure 1:


Figure 1: site URL

Part of what is on this site is shown in Figure 2:


Figure 2: site URL

jink: now what on Earth does this word mean? Turns out that it's quite a useful word meaning, as a verb, to change direction suddenly and nimbly, as when dodging a pursuer e.g. "she was too quick for him and jinked away every time". As a noun it means a sudden quick change of direction as in "people remember him for his runs on the wing, his jinks". Figure 3 shows its use in a military sense.


Figure 3

As a verb in "to jink" it can mean to jingle or to chink as in "the money jinked". As a noun, it can mean the sharp jingle of coins. In its plural form, in the phrase "high jinks", it means boisterous fun as in "high jinks behind the wheel of a car".


kink: this word is far more common and means, as a noun, a sharp twist or curve in something that is otherwise straight as in "a kink in the road". It can also refer to a stiffness in the neck, back, etc.; a crick as in "it takes the kinks out of stiff necks". As a verb it means to form or cause to form a sharp twist or curve as in "the river kinks violently in a right angle".

However, the word has usage far beyond that listed in the previous paragraph. Here is an interesting article, titled kink, from Wikipedia:
In human sexuality, kinkiness is the use of non-conventional sexual practices, concepts or fantasies. The term derives from the idea of a "bend" (cf. a "kink") in one's sexual behaviour, to contrast such behaviour with "straight" or "vanilla" sexual mores and proclivities. It is thus a colloquial term for non-normative sexual behaviour. 
The term "kink" has been claimed by some who practice sexual fetishism as a term or synonym for their practices, indicating a range of sexual and sexualistic practices from playful to sexual objectification and certain paraphilias. In the 21st century the term "kink", along with expressions like BDSM, leather and fetish, has become more commonly used than the term paraphilia. Some universities also feature student organisations focused on kink, within the context of wider LGBTI concerns. Psychologist Margie Nichols describes kink as one of the "variations that make up the 'Q' in LGBTQ".

Kink sexual practices go beyond what are considered conventional sexual practices as a means of heightening the intimacy between sexual partners. Some draw a distinction between kink and fetishism, defining the former as enhancing partner intimacy, and the latter as replacing it. Because of its relation to conformist sexual boundaries, which themselves vary by time and place, the definition of what is and is not kink varies widely as well.

In a study published in 2016 it was found that nearly half of respondents reported an interest in some form of kink activity and about a third had experienced a kink practice at least once.

Of course the associated adjective kinky is widely used in this context. 


Link to Guardian Article

klink: the clink is a term for jail or prison and one sense of klink is as a spelling variant of that. I've dealt with clink in my previous post. Apart from this meaning, the use of Klink as a surname is strongly associated with Colonel Klink, a character played by the actor Werner Klemperer. Here is an excerpt from the Wikipedia article about him:
He is best known, however, as Colonel Wilhelm Klink: the bungling, cowardly, conceited, and self-serving Kommandant of Stalag 13 on Hogan's Heroes, which was broadcast on CBS from 1965–1971. Klemperer, conscious that he would be playing the role of a German officer during the Nazi regime, accepted the part only on the condition that Klink would be portrayed as a fool who never succeeded. According to co-star Richard Dawson, Klemperer supplied his own uniforms. When Klemperer's father, the famous conductor Otto Klemperer, saw his first episode of Hogan's Heroes, he said to his son, "Your work is good, but who is the author of this material?" In addition to the character's bumblings, Klink was also remembered for his excruciatingly bad violin playing. For his performance as Klink, Klemperer received six Emmy Award nominations for best supporting actor, winning successive awards in 1968 and 1969.


According to this site, Klink is the 28,356th most common surname in the world with approximately 18,944 people bearing this surname. It means a dweller near a rushing stream or ravine; a dweller near a field gate; a dweller near a corner; a dweller on, or near, a low hill.

Apparently it is also used a derogatory term for a member of Klingon race, made famous by the Star Trek television series and movies.

link: the meaning of this word needs no explanation but it's occurrence in many common phrases is worthy of note. One of the most common phrases is the proverbial weak link.


Another common phrase is the missing link. To quote from this source:
The word "missing" is from Old English "missan" of Germanic origin to describe something that is not present, while "link" is from the early 15th century, likely from Old Norse, to describe a series of rings or loops in a chain. The phrase missing link is first attested in 1851 in Lyell.
A missing link refers to an omitted or unknown detail that is necessary in order to fully comprehend an issue or subject. The missing link is also used as a non-scientific term to describe a transitional fossil or species connected to the process of evolution. It is used to represent a hypothetical intermediate evolutionary form connecting animal species and its presumed ancestors.
In chemistry and biology, a cross-link is a bond that links one polymer chain to another. These links may take the form of covalent bonds or ionic bonds and the polymers can be either synthetic polymers or natural polymers. 


Image Source

Internet links are ubiquitous and so this probable the context in which the word link is used most often.


Companies involved in Internet communication are found of incorporating the word into their brand names e.g. D-Link.
mink: a small animal with valuable fur that is used to make expensive coats, or the fur from this animal as in "Mink coats were once upon a time a fashion accessory". Even these much exploited animals have not escaped the Covid-19 hysteria as Figure 4 shows.


Figure 4: source
The article begins:
There was shock last week when Denmark decided to cull all its mink - up to 17 million animals - because of the spread of coronavirus. That national cull has turned into a political outcry, now that the prime minister has admitted the plan was rushed and had no legal basis. Danish authorities worry that a mutated form of coronavirus found in mink could potentially hamper the effectiveness of a future vaccine.
I don't really have anything more to say after that.

pink: there are lots of interesting phrases involving the word "pink" including:
  • to be in the pink meaning to be in very good health or condition. The phrase "in the pink" is often followed by "of health" or "of condition" as in "Jill is happy to be in the pink again after her hospital stay", "Yes, I was sick a few weeks ago, but I'm in the pink of health now" and "After that long downturn, the economy is finally back in the pink."

  • to see pink elephants meaning to hallucinate or see things incorrectly due to acute alcohol intoxication or withdrawal. The phrase became especially popularised by the 1941 Disney animated film Dumbo, in which the title character accidentally becomes drunk and sees a parade of pink elephant hallucinations. Examples of its use include "My dad said that he saw pink elephants for a while after he gave up drinking" and "When I started seeing pink elephants, I knew I had to stop drinking so much."

  • to have a pink fit meaning to become extremely angry. Primarily heard in UK. An example of its use would be "Don't have a pink fit—I wasn't trying to insult you."

  • to be tickled pink meaning to be greatly pleased as in "Thank you so much for this. I know that it will tickle Tom pink to get a jersey signed by his favourite quarterback" and "My family loves my girlfriend almost as much as I do, so it tickled them pink to hear that we're getting married."
These explanations are taken from https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/pink.

plink: this onomatopoeic word can mean, as a verb, to emit a short, sharp, metallic or ringing sound as in "the sounds echoed and plinked like bells". As a noun, it means a short, sharp, metallic or ringing sound as in "there was a plink, the sound of an aluminium bat hitting the ball". 


Plink Sport Knock Down Targets

According to the dictionary.com, it can also mean, as an intransitive verb, to shoot, as with a rifle, at targets selected at whim as in "to plink at coins tossed in the air". As a transitive verb, it can mean to shoot at for practice or amusement, as with a rifle as in "to plink bottles set along a fence railing".

rink: this is a smooth expanse of ice for ice-skating, often artificially prepared and inside a building or arena; a smooth floor, usually of wood, for roller-skating; a building or enclosure for ice-skating or roller-skating; skating arena; an area of ice marked off for the game of curling; a section of a bowling green where a match can be played; a set of players on one side in a lawn-bowling or curling match.


shrink: as a verb, the words means to become or make smaller in size or amount as in "the workforce has shrunk to less than a thousand" or to move back or away, especially because of fear or disgust as in "she shrank away from him, covering her face". 

As a noun, it can refer to a clinical psychologist, psychiatrist, or psychotherapist as in "you should see a shrink". 

Why is a psychiatrist called a shrink?

Why are psychiatrists and psychologists called shrinks? It's a jocular reference to the ritual practice in certain tribal societies of literally shrinking the heads of one's vanquished enemies. The term shrink was adopted as a joking reference to psychotherapists in the 1960s.
One commonly used expressions involving a derivative of the word "shrink" is that of a shrinking violet meaning an exaggeratedly shy person as in "Dorothy is no shrinking violet when it comes to expressing her views".

sink: the widely used word "sink", as a noun, has an interesting etymology:
Basins… have been around since the beginning of civilisation – an indentation in rock served as a washbasin for our forefathers. Our English word basin comes from the old French word baçon, meaning shallow vessel or dish. Those basins were just basins and didn’t have a drain or plug or other conveniences. What we call sinks are in fact ‘basins’ from which the water ‘sinks’. The term sink likely comes from the old English term ‘sincan’ – to become submerged, go under, or subside. Originally it referred to the place to where the contents of your basin would sink. Source.

The most famous of all sinks is the kitchen sink of course and the phrase everything but the kitchen sink means almost everything that one can think of, everything imaginable, a very large number of things, whether needed or not, much more than the necessary number of things. 

“Stop being chained to the kitchen sink” was a term often used by the feminists of the 1970s to inspire women to step out of the home and into the workplace as in "the traditional view of women as dedicated housewives tied to the kitchen sink is all but extinct".

In the field of the arts, kitchen-sink refers to those art forms characterised by great realism in the depiction of drab or sordid subjects as in "a kitchen-sink drama".

In metaphorical terms, a sinking ship is something which is doomed; a lost cause; an impending debacle; an ongoing disaster. On the other hand, a sinking heart is a heart filled with great sadness.

I could go on but it's clear that such a common word has found its way into a great many expressions in the English language.

 skink: here is what Britannica has to say about skinks:

Skink, (family Scincidae), any of about 1,275 species of lizards, mostly secretive ground dwellers or burrowers, that are represented throughout most of the world but are especially diverse in Southeast Asia and its associated islands, the deserts of Australia, and the temperate regions of North America. The bodies of skinks are typically cylindrical in cross section, and most species have cone-shaped heads and long, tapering tails. The largest species, the prehensile-tailed skink (Corucia zebrata), reaches a maximum length of about 76 cm (30 inches), but most species are less than 20 cm (8 inches) long. Ground-dwelling and burrowing skinks may show such adaptations as a transparent “window” scale in place of a movable lower eyelid. This adaptation allows the animal to see and protect its eyes from rough particles while burrowing. Other species of skinks may have such peculiarities as reduced or absent limbs and sunken eardrums. Some species are arboreal (tree-dwelling), and others are semiaquatic. Skinks eat insects and similar small invertebrates; large species are herbivorous and consume fruits of various kinds. Some species lay eggs, while others give birth to fully developed young.


It seems that skink can be used as derogatory Black British slang for a white person.

Maybe that's a good point to end this post and save the remaining words (slink, spink, stink, swink, sync, think, twink, wink, zinc, zink, zinke) for a future post.

Thursday 3 June 2021

From Blink to Wink: Part 1

I'm So Tired

I'm so tired, I haven't slept a wink, 
I'm so tired, my mind is on the blink. 
I wonder should I get up and fix myself a drink. 

These lines form the first three lines of The Beatles famous song "I'm So Tired" released in November of 1968. It's a fitting introduction to this post because it features three rhyming words: wink, blink and drink and this post is all about rhymes.


In this post, I'll be looking at the monosyllabic words that rhyme with blink and wink. As near as I can tell, the former and the latter words are the first and last in a category of words that rhyme with ink. However, let's check out, using Rhyme Desk, whether these are indeed the first and last such words. Not surprisingly, it turns out that they are not. Here is the list of rhyming words that the site supplies:

bink, blink, brink, chink, cinque, clink, dink, drink, fink, gink, hink, inc, jink, kink, klink, link, mink, pink, plink, rink, shrink, sink, skink, slink, spink, stink, swink, sync, think, twink, wink, zinc, zink, zinke

Some of these words I've heard of, others not. The words in bold are what the site provides links to and are therefore the most common. Let's explore each and everyone of them. However, this would make the post very lengthy so I'll break things up. In Part 1, I'll examine the words from bink to hink.

PART 1: From bink to hink

bink: now this is word that I hadn't heard of but the official meaning is that it is a Scottish form of bench. There are numerous, and humorous, slang meanings as well. In Indonesian, the word for bench is bangku.


blink: the introductory lines of the lyrics of the Beatles song at the start of this post contain the phrase "my mind is on the blink", meaning that the singer's mind has ceased functioning properly. This is only one of the many colloquialisms containing the word "blink". 

Others include:
  • in the blink of an eye - meaning very quickly as in:

    Watch the baby closely, she can get into something dangerous in the blink of an eye.

  • blink-and-you-miss-it - meaning of such a brief duration or small size as to be easily missed as in:

    I was excited to be in the movie, but it was really just a blink-and-you-miss-it part.

  • without (even) blinking an eye - meaning without having or displaying any sort of emotional response, especially to that which would normally elicit such a reaction as in:

    When we were traveling, Janet used to eat things like crickets and jellyfish without blinking an eye.
Figure 1 shows the cover of Malcolm Gladwell's book that uses blink as its title and explores the notion that decisions made in the blink of an eye are often more effective than carefully thought out decisions.

Figure 1

brink: two countries are on the brink of war. How often have we heard that expression? Too often these bellicose times. Literally the word means the extreme edge of land before a steep slope or a body or water as in "the brink of the cliffs". Metaphorically, it means a point at which something, typically something unwelcome, is about to happen; the verge as in "the country was on the brink of a constitutional crisis" (quoted from Oxford Languages). The related word brinkmanship means the art or practice of pursuing a dangerous policy to the limits of safety before stopping, especially in politics as in "in any game of brinkmanship, it is possible that one side will collapse suddenly".


chink: this word is most commonly used in the phrase a chink in ones armour or a chink in ones armor to use American spelling. As Wikipedia notes:
The idiom "chink in one's armor" refers to an area of vulnerability. It has traditionally been used to refer to a weak spot in a figurative suit of armor. The standard meaning is similar to that of Achilles' heel. The phrase "chink in one's armor" has been used idiomatically since the mid-17th century. It is based on a definition of chink meaning "a crack or gap," dating back to around 1400. While the phrase itself is innocuous, its use in contemporary times has caused controversy in the United States due to it including "chink", a word that can also be used as an ethnic slur to refer to someone of Chinese or East Asian descent. 

In these woke times, it may be only a matter of time before the phrase is removed from the language. Nonetheless, I did find the photo shown in Figure 2 rather funny.


Figure 2

The word chink can be used as a verb meaning to make or cause to make a light, high-pitched ringing sound, as of glasses or coins striking together. It can also be used a noun in this sense to mean a high-pitched ringing sound as in "the chink of glasses" or "the chain joining the handcuffs chinked". I think the word clink, that we'll meet later, is more commonly used in this sense.

cinque: this word means five especially in dice or cards. It derives from Middle English cink, from Middle French cinq, from Latin quinque. It is pronounced as in "sink". The spelling and meaning is the same in Italian, but is pronounced differently as in "chinquay" (see Figure 3). The French spelling is cinq and pronounced something like "sank".

Figure 3

clink: apart from meaning a sharp ringing sound, such as that made by striking metal or glass as in "the clink of ice in tall glasses" or, as a verb, to strike (one's glass) against another's to express friendly feelings before drinking as in "she clinked her glass against mine".


In Internet slang, clink can stand for click the link. Figure 4 cleverly combines the themes of drinking and crime.

Figure 4

One of the most common uses of the word is as a euphemism for jail or prison as in "he spent the night in the clink for being drunk and disorderly". The name derives a prison which was on Clink Street in the Southwark area of London. See Figure 5.


Figure 5

dink: back in the 80s, this word (especially when capitalised) was an acronym for Dual/Double Income No Kids but that was a long time ago. In that sense, you don't hear it used as much these days but with falling birthrates and the increasing numbers of gay couples, the term has more applicability than ever.


However, its long term meaning has been drop shot or a ball struck delicately when used as a noun and to hit or kick a ball delicately when used as a verb.

The word has also been used as a disparaging term for a Vietnamese person, especially during the Vietnam War. It was originally an Australian military slang term for an East Asian person, perhaps from rhyming slang for chink. However, I was in the Australian Army during the Vietnam War and don't recall the use of the term.

Nowadays, the term can still be used to offend but it carries the meaning of a stupid, annoying or contemptible person. Inoffensively it can also be used to mean to tow a friend on your bicycle, either on ones lap or on the front handlebars as in "Oi Barry, give us a dink mate will ya?" or "Had to bloody dink Sharron down to the milkbar". This is Aussie slang, although as an Australian I hadn't heard the term used in that sense.

drink: no need to explain the meaning of this word so all I'll include this video which displays the lyrics to one of my favourite drinking songs:


fink: all that sprang to mind when I heard this word as the phrase "rat fink" which it turns out is a cartoon character. Here is part of what Wikipedia has to say about the character whose depiction is shown in Figure 6:
Rat Fink is one of several hot rod characters created by artist Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, one of the originators of Kustom Kulture of automobile enthusiasts. Roth conceived Rat Fink as an anti-hero to Mickey Mouse. Rat Fink is usually portrayed as either green or gray, comically grotesque and depraved-looking with bulging, bloodshot eyes, an oversized mouth with sharp, narrow teeth, and wearing red overalls with the initials "R.F." on them. He is often seen driving cars or motorcycles.
Figure 6

A footnote in the Wikipedia article explains that:
The term fink is underworld slang for an informer. It derives from the German word for "finch" — i.e. one who "sings" — and is comparable to a stool pigeon. Ratfink is an intensified version of fink. By the time Roth adopted the name for his character, the term had started to pass into the vernacular.
More generally a fink is an unpleasant or contemptible person and to fink is inform on (someone) to the authorities as in "there was no shortage of people willing to fink on their neighbours" or to fail to do something promised or expected as in "administration officials had finked out".

gink: this is not a word with which I was familiar but it is commonly used as a slang term for a boy or a man who seems odd, foolish or contemptible as in "silly old gink". As an acronym it could stand  for Green Inclinations No Kids as shown in Figure 7. This is reminiscent of the acronym DINK meaning Dual/Double Income No Kids. 


Figure 7

Figure 8 shows a depiction of Colonel Blink described by Wikipedia as:
Colonel Blink, "The Short-Sighted Gink", was a British comic strip, drawn by Tom Bannister in November 1958 for the majority of its run, with a few later strips being drawn by Bill Ritchie and Gordon Bell in the same style as Bannister. The strip was published in the comics magazine The Beezer. Denis Gifford in his Encyclopedia of Comic Characters (1987) attributes his creation to "Carmichael." These days he occasionally appears in the reprint Classics from the Comics series.

Figure 8: Mr. Magoo, a similar near-sighted character.

hink: this is a now obsolete term for a reaping hook which a type of sickle used in harvesting. See Figure 9.

Figure 9

As usual, the Urban Dictionary comes to our aid to provide further definitions of the word. Here are some of the more amusing:
  • The act of raising one's eye-brows in a provocative manner, suggesting the initiation of a sexual act as in "Dude are you hinking me or do you just have tourettes?'".
  • A senseless action taken soley to fulfill an unexplainable impulse as in "Jaques: I just bought 175 purple porcelain racoons. Michel: Damn man that's was a hink and a half".
  • Aberdeen/north east Scotland slang for think as when someone asks "U gan doon tae ih Shops" and the reply is "Aye hink so mate".
  • Suspicious and illegal materials, often relating to identity theft and counterfeit material, such as credit card numbers and personal information as when someone asks "hey man, wheres mikes car?" and the reply is "I don't know but we have to clear all the hink out of it before the cops come looking".
  • Mugged or robbed as in "Steven got hinked in a dark ally".