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[ UK /kˈɪŋk/ ]
NOUN
  1. an eccentric idea
  2. a difficulty or flaw in a plan or operation
    there are still a few kinks to iron out
  3. a painful muscle spasm especially in the neck or back (`rick' and `wrick' are British)
  4. a sharp bend in a line produced when a line having a loop is pulled tight
  5. a person with unusual sexual tastes
VERB
  1. form a curl, curve, or kink
    the cigar smoke curled up at the ceiling
  2. curl tightly
    crimp hair

How To Use kink In A Sentence

  • His mother's liniment was prime stuff, and allowed him to move the limb often enough to keep the kinks worked out.
  • Fracas, that mother of all big floral scents, the strange, kinky Diva Tubereuse Criminelle, and the lustrously beautiful Carnal Flower. Archive 2007-07-01
  • It kinks, detaches itself from actin, unkinks, and reattaches, and thereby ratchets along the actin filament in a series of power strokes.
  • But a more elastic material, such as nitinol, can be used to produce an endoscope that offers a high degree of flexibility and kink resistance.
  • Currently, a crumpled “riser” pipe is preventing the full flow of oil – like a kinked garden hose – though reports suggest it is gradually deteriorating. Balloon Juice » Blog Archive » Ninety Days of Hell from Decades of Neglect
  • Over time, their trivia games lead to sexual exploration and all kinds of would-be kinky relationship layers start to develop and ferment.
  • She went so far as to offer to perform all types of kinky sexual favors.
  • Recently, we've smoothed out some minor kinks she had in her takeaway and the top of the backswing.
  • Here and there, we get hints of sado-masochism and kinks.
  • They had a scene where they have the most horrible kinkiest sex I have ever seen in a film in a long time, where she would punch him in the face while riding him and whatever. Yeti: A Love Story (2006)
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