slink

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To sneak about furtively.
  2. To give birth to an animal prematurely.
noun
  1. A furtive sneaking motion.
  2. The young of an animal when born prematurely, especially a calf.
  3. The meat of such a prematurely born animal.
  4. A bastard child, one born out of wedlock.
  5. A thievish fellow; a sneak.
adj
  1. Thin; lean

Pronunciation

/slɪŋk/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-slink.wav

Word forms

slink slinks slinking slunk slinked slank more slink most slink

Etymology

From Middle English slynken, sclynken, from Old English slincan (“to creep; crawl”), from Proto-Germanic *slinkaną (“to creep; crawl”), from Proto-Indo-European *sleng-, *slenk- (“to turn; wind; twist”), from Proto-Indo-European *sel- (“to sneak; crawl”). Cognate with West Frisian slinke, Dutch slinken (“to shrink; shrivel”), Low German slinken, Swedish slinka (“to glide”). Compare also German schleichen (“to slink”). More at sleek.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.