Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Middle English yngkiling

      • Originating in English in the early 16th century, inkling comes instead from Middle English yngkiling, meaning “whisper or mention,” and perhaps further back from the verb inclen, meaning “to hint at.”
      www.merriam-webster.com › dictionary › inkling
  1. Originating in English in the early 16th century, inkling comes instead from Middle English yngkiling, meaning “whisper or mention,” and perhaps further back from the verb inclen, meaning “to hint at.” An early sense of the word meant “a faint perceptible sound or undertone” or “rumor,” but now people usually use the word to ...

  2. People also ask

  3. May 27, 2022 · inkling. (n.) c. 1400, apparently from the gerund of the Middle English verb inclen "utter in an undertone, hint at, hint" (mid-14c.), which is of unknown origin; perhaps it is related to Old English inca "doubt, suspicion, question, scruple." However the earliest record of the word is as a nyngkiling; and The Middle English Compendium offers ...

  4. We can tingle or tickle, but we don’t inkle, so where did inkling derive from? These days, there isn’t much we can do with an inkling other than to have one. In the 13th century, when the word was coined, inklings weren’t had, they were heard. Inklings, like tinklings, were small sounds.

  5. Jun 2, 2024 · inkling (plural inklings) Usually preceded by forms of to give: a slight hint, implication, or suggestion given . Often preceded by forms of to get or to have: an imprecise idea or slight knowledge of something; a suspicion . ( British, dialectal) A desire, an inclination .

  6. The earliest known use of the noun inkling is in the Middle English period (11501500). OED's earliest evidence for inkling is from around 140050, in Alexander.

  7. The word comes from the medieval English word inclen, which suitably enough means "to utter in an undertone." In other words, what's really being said is in between the lines of what's actually being said on the surface.

  8. INKLING meaning: 1. a feeling that something is true or likely to happen, although you are not certain: 2. a…. Learn more.

  1. People also search for