PINK


Meaning of PINK in English

I. ˈpiŋk transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English pynken to make holes with a pointed instrument

1.

a.

(1) : to pierce with a sword or other pointed instrument : stab

pinks him neatly in the arm — Life

(2) : to wound with a bullet

pinked three times by an assassin — Time

(3) : to hit with a missile

gets pinked so often because he crowds the plate — W.B.Furlong

b. : to wound (as pride) by insensitivity : wound with the weapons of irony, criticism, or ridicule

television, advertising, and urban gullibility … are rather easily pinked — John McCarten

pinked by the small darts of political enemies — W.S.White

2.

a. : to cut or perforate (cloth, leather or paper) in an ornamental pattern that often shows an underlay of a contrasting color

b. : to cut a saw-toothed edge on (cloth, paper, leather) especially with pinking shears

3.

a. : adorn , decorate , deck

b. obsolete : tattoo

II. noun

( -s )

obsolete : a hole or eyelet made with or as if with a pinking iron

III. ˈpiŋk noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English pynk, from Middle Dutch pinke

1. : a small Dutch fishing craft characterized by a full forebody narrowing to an almost pointed stern with an overhanging false counter

2. : any of various ships having a narrow overhanging stern — called also pinkie

IV. noun

( -s )

Etymology: alteration of earlier penk, from Middle English

1. dialect England : the European minnow

2. Britain : a newly hatched salmon or grayling

V. intransitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: probably from Dutch pinken to wink, blink

1. chiefly dialect : to peer or peep with half-closed eyes : wink , blink

2. chiefly dialect : to gleam faintly : diminish , fade

VI. adjective

dialect chiefly Britain , of an eye : half shut : winking

VII. noun

( -s )

chiefly Scotland : a small gleam of light

- pink of the evening

VIII. noun

( -s )

Etymology: origin unknown

1. : a plant of the genus Dianthus: as

a. : cottage pink

b. : china pink

2.

a. : the very embodiment : paragon

your new doctor is the pink of politeness — Encore

the pink and pattern of a soldier — Thomas Wood †1950

b. : a member of the elite : a person dressed in the height of fashion : swell , exquisite ; also : elite

the pink of Victorian propriety appeared — C.W.Cunnington

c. : highest degree possible : height , extreme

dressed in the pink of fashion — G.E.Fussell

keep their house in the pink of repair — Rebecca West

- in the pink

IX. adjective

Etymology: pink (VIII)

1. : resembling the garden pink in color : being of the color pink

tallish man with pink wrinkly face — R.W.Brown †1956

— often used in combination

his fat pink -haired wife — Maeve Brennan

2. : holding or believed to hold advanced liberal or moderately radical political or economic views

3. : moved , angered, excited

would get quite pink on the subject — Graham Greene

— often used as an intensive

ought to be thrilled pink that you know an aristocrat like me — Calder Willingham

flattered pink at the charge — T.O.Heggen

scared pink of … friends with marriage in their eye — Ethel Wilson

• pink·ness noun -es

X. noun

( -s )

Etymology: pink (IX)

1. : any of a group of colors bluish red to red in hue, of medium to high lightness, and of low to moderate saturation

2.

a.

(1) : the scarlet color of a fox hunter's coat

(2) : a fox hunter's coat of this color

(3) : a fox hunter

b. : pink-colored clothing

dressed in pink

c. pinks plural : light-colored trousers worn with a winter semidress uniform by army officers

3. : a person who holds advanced liberal or moderately radical political or economic views — compare red

4. : humpback salmon

XI. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: pink (IX)

intransitive verb

: to turn pink

when the eastern sky was beginning to pink — T.W.Duncan

pinking up just a little — Victoria Case

transitive verb

1. : to cause to turn pink

pinked his ears with pleased embarrassment — J.H.Wheelwright

2. : to change the color of (a topaz) to pink by heating

XII. intransitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: imitative

: to make a tinkling or pinging noise : ping

pinking like a hundred tiny coins — Gerald Durrell

when the mixture is too rich … the engine pinks — Cyril Connolly

XIII. noun

( -s )

Etymology: imitative

: chaffinch

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.