blink
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 11
- Words With Friends
- 14
- Letters
- 5
Definition of blink
24 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included
verb
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(intransitive)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“The loser in the staring game is the person who blinks first.”
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verb
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(intransitive)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“The loser in the staring game is the person who blinks first.”
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(intransitive, transitive)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“She blinked her tears away.”
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(intransitive)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“One eye was blinking, and one leg was lame.”
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(intransitive)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“Show me thy chink, to blink through with mine eyne.”
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(intransitive)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“The dew was falling fast, the stars began to blink.”
“The sun blinked fair on pool and stream.”
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(Geordie, intransitive, obsolete)To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
“Now exile is over, I'll fly to the north, The home of my childhood, the place of my birth; O the transports of gladness that over me reign, To blink upon canny Newcastle again!”
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To flash on and off at regular intervals.
“The blinking text on the screen was distracting.”
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To flash on and off at regular intervals.
“An urban legend claims that gang members will attack anyone who blinks them.”
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To flash on and off at regular intervals.
“Don't come to the door until I blink twice.”
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(excessive)To perform the smallest action that could solicit a response.
“All the waiters in your grand cafe / Leave their tables when you blink.”
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To have the slightest doubt, hesitation or remorse.
“The soldier shot the intruders without so much as blinking.”
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(transitive)To shut the eyes to (something); to evade, ignore.
“I have no wish to blink or extenuate the serious nature of the difficulty arising from this discrepancy of dates.”
“It is no use blinking the unpleasant fact.”
“"Well, it's no good blinking facts. We had better clear out soon. If not tomorrow, then the day after."”
- To turn slightly sour, or blinky, as beer, milk, etc.
- To teleport, mostly for short distances.
noun
- (countable, uncountable)The act of quickly closing both eyes and opening them again.
- (countable, figuratively, uncountable)The time needed to close and reopen one's eyes.
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(countable, uncountable)A text formatting feature that causes text to disappear and reappear as a form of visual emphasis.
“I can think of no good reason to use blink because blinking text and images are annoying, they mark the creator as an amateur, and they have poor browser support.”
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(countable, uncountable)A glimpse or glance.
“This is the first blink that ever I had of him.”
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(UK, countable, dialectal, uncountable)gleam; glimmer; sparkle
“Not a blink of light was there.”
“this man vanished away […]as he had been a blink of the sun”
- (countable, uncountable)The dazzling whiteness about the horizon caused by the reflection of light from fields of ice at sea; iceblink
- (countable, in-plural, uncountable)Boughs cast where deer are to pass, in order to turn or check them.
- (countable, uncountable)An ability that allows teleporting, mostly for short distances
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(slang)A fan of the South Korean girl group Blackpink.
“The long-awaited solo from BLACKPINK's Jennie came along and was very well received by BLINKs everywhere.”
“BLACKPINK's first concert in Manila was definitely one for the books and BLINKs can only hope the four girls can come back sooner with brand new hit songs!”
“Many Blinks frantically refreshed multiple tabs of the ticket sales site on several devices just to secure a ticket to BlackPink's world tour in a cutthroat battle against thousands of other Blinks.”
- (alt-of)Alternative letter-case form of Blink.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English blynken, blenken, from Old English *blincan (suggested by causative verb blenċan (“to deceive”); > English blench), from Proto-Germanic *blinkaną, a variant of *blīkaną (“to gleam, shine”). Cognate…
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From Middle English blynken, blenken, from Old English *blincan (suggested by causative verb blenċan (“to deceive”); > English blench), from Proto-Germanic *blinkaną, a variant of *blīkaną (“to gleam, shine”). Cognate with Dutch blinken (“to glitter, shine”), German blinken (“to flash, blink”), Danish blinke (“to flash, twinkle, wink, blink”), Swedish blinka (“to flash, blink, twinkle, wink, blink”). Related to blank, blick, blike, bleak.
Words you can make from blink
16 playable · top: BILK (10 pts)
Best play bilk 10 points4-letter words
3 words3-letter words
8 words2-letter words
4 wordsHooks
1 extension · 1 back
A single letter you can add to blink to make another valid word.
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