I. tin ‧ kle 1 /ˈtɪŋk ə l/ BrE AmE noun [countable usually singular]
1 . a light ringing sound
tinkle of
the distant tinkle of a cow-bell
2 . give somebody a tinkle British English old-fashioned informal to call someone on the telephone:
I’ll give you a tinkle tomorrow.
3 . have a tinkle British English spoken to ↑ urinate (=pass water from your body) – used especially by children or when talking to children
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THESAURUS
■ made by things hitting other things
▪ bang a loud sound caused especially when something hard or heavy hits something else:
I heard a loud bang and rushed out to see what had happened.
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He slammed the door shut with a bang.
▪ crash a very loud sound caused when something hits something else, especially when damage is caused:
The tray of dishes fell to the floor with a crash.
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I heard an enormous crash outside our house, and I went to see what had happened.
▪ thud a quiet low sound made when a heavy object falls down onto surface:
There was a dull thud as the box hit the floor.
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His head hit the ground with a sickening thud.
▪ thump a dull loud sound made when a heavy object hits something else:
There was a loud thump as Eddie threw Luther back against the wall.
▪ clink a short ringing sound made when two glass, metal, or china objects hit each other:
the clink of champagne glasses
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The clink of cutlery could be heard in the restaurant.
▪ tinkle the pleasant sound that is made by light pieces of glass or metal hitting each other repeatedly:
He listened to the faint tinkle of cow bells in the distance.
▪ jingle the sound of small metal objects being shaken together:
the jingle of her bracelets
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the jingle of keys
▪ rattle a short repeated sound made when things hit against each other - used especially when part of something is loose and is hitting against something:
There was a strange rattle coming from the engine.
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the rattle of the trolley
II. tinkle 2 BrE AmE verb
[ Date: 1300-1400 ; Origin: tink 'to tinkle' (14-17 centuries) ; from the sound ]
1 . [intransitive and transitive] to make light ringing sounds, or to make something do this:
a tinkling bell
2 . [intransitive] spoken to ↑ urinate (=pass water from your body) – used especially by children or when talking to children:
Do you have to go tinkle?