PINKED

Verb

pinked

simple past tense and past participle of pink

Source: Wiktionary


Pinked, a.

Definition: Pierced with small holes; worked in eyelets; scalloped on the edge. Shak.

PINK

Pink, n. Etym: [D. pink.] (Naut.)

Definition: A vessel with a very narrow stern; -- called also pinky. Sir W. Scott. Pink stern (Naut.), a narrow stern.

Pink, v. i. Etym: [D. pinken, pinkoogen, to blink, twinkle with the eyes.]

Definition: To wink; to blink. [Obs.] L'Estrange.

Pink, a.

Definition: Half-shut; winking. [Obs.] Shak.

Pink, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Pinked; p. pr. & vb. n. Pinking.] Etym: [OE. pinken to prick, probably a nasalized form of pick.]

1. To pierce with small holes; to cut the edge of, as cloth or paper, in small scallops or angles.

2. To stab; to pierce as with a sword. Addison.

3. To choose; to cull; to pick out. [Obs.] Herbert.

Pink, n.

Definition: A stab. Grose.

Pink, n. Etym: [Perh. akin to pick; as if the edges of the petals were picked out. Cf. Pink, v. t.]

1. (Bot.)

Definition: A name given to several plants of the caryophyllaceous genus Dianthus, and to their flowers, which are sometimes very fragrant and often double in cultivated varieties. The species are mostly perennial herbs, with opposite linear leaves, and handsome five- petaled flowers with a tubular calyx.

2. A color resulting from the combination of a pure vivid red with more or less white; -- so called from the common color of the flower. Dryden.

3. Anything supremely excellent; the embodiment or perfection of something. "The very pink of courtesy." Shak.

4. (Zoöl.)

Definition: The European minnow; -- so called from the color of its abdomen in summer. [Prov. Eng.] Bunch pink is Dianthus barbatus.

– China, or Indian, pink. See under China.

– Clove pink is Dianthus Caryophyllus, the stock from which carnations are derived.

– Garden pink. See Pheasant's eye.

– Meadow pink is applied to Dianthus deltoides; also, to the ragged robin.

– Maiden pink, Dianthus deltoides.

– Moss pink. See under Moss.

– Pink needle, the pin grass; -- so called from the long, tapering points of the carpels. See Alfilaria.

– Sea pink. See Thrift.

Pink, a.

Definition: Resembling the garden pink in color; of the color called pink (see 6th Pink, 2); as, a pink dress; pink ribbons. Pink eye (Med.), a popular name for an epidemic variety of ophthalmia, associated with early and marked redness of the eyeball.

– Pink salt (Chem. & Dyeing), the double chlorides of (stannic) tin and ammonium, formerly much used as a mordant for madder and cochineal.

– Pink saucer, a small saucer, the inner surface of which is covered with a pink pigment.

Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition



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Word of the Day

24 December 2024

INTUITIVELY

(adverb) in an intuitive manner; “inventors seem to have chosen intuitively a combination of explosive and aggressive sounds as warning signals to be used on automobiles”


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Coffee Trivia

The Boston Tea Party helped popularize coffee in America. The hefty tea tax imposed on the colonies in 1773 resulted in America switching from tea to coffee. In the lead up to the Revolutionary War, it became patriotic to sip java instead of tea. The Civil War made the drink more pervasive. Coffee helped energize tired troops, and drinking it became an expression of freedom.

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