释义 |
jink verb- in aerial combat, to make sudden, evasive movements UK, 1917
- — Time, p. 34, 10 December 1965
- — Carl Fleischhauer, A Glossary of Army Slang, p. 27, 1968
- to swindle NEW ZEALAND
Originally a term from a card game that evolved into wider usage. - — David McGill, David McGill’s Complete Kiwi Slang Dictionary, p. 63, 1998
- to make sudden, evasive movements, 1785
- Jink through the jungle / Make the ABs rumble. — Joseph Tuso, Singing the Vietnam Blues, p. 137, 1990
- The separation gave them the room to “jink,” to move around up and down, left and right. The rule was never to stay straight and level for long and give the enemy a chance to hit you. — Gerry Carroll, North S*A*R, p. 202, 1991
|