hinky

hinky
a) Acting suspiciously; strange, unusual; acting in a manner as if having something to hide, or seemingly crooked.

I thought he might be acting hinky.

b) Suspicious (of something).

Theres nothing hinky about this.


Wikipedia foundation.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • hinky — /hingˈki/ (US sl) adjective (hinkˈier; hinkˈiest) 1. Anxious 2. Arousing suspicion ORIGIN: Scot henk, hink a limp, hesitation …   Useful english dictionary

  • hinky — I adj Nervous. Riding so fast in a car driven by a knucklehead left Clara a little hinky. 1950s II adj Questionable, suspicious; unreliable, out of whack. The car got hinky and Chad had to put in a new radiator. 1960s …   Historical dictionary of American slang

  • hinky — The right way to spell hinkie. :) Something that is out of whack, just a bit off, wrong, confused, suspect. His directions were a bit hinky, no? That milk taste hinky to you? …   Dictionary of american slang

  • hinky — The right way to spell hinkie. :) Something that is out of whack, just a bit off, wrong, confused, suspect. His directions were a bit hinky, no? That milk taste hinky to you? …   Dictionary of american slang

  • Hinky Dinky — was a supermarket chain based in Omaha, Nebraska, that operated mainly in Nebraska and Iowa.HistoryThe Hinky Dinky grocery store chain was started by Jule, Henry and Albert Newman, brothers, and Ben Silver, a cousin, in Omaha in 1925. Another… …   Wikipedia

  • hinky — adjective (hinkier; est) Etymology: alteration of argot hincty suspicious Date: 1956 1. slang nervous, jittery 2. slang suspicious …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Hinky — …   Wikipedia

  • HINKY — Heineken, N, V, (Business » NASDAQ Symbols) …   Abbreviations dictionary

  • hinky — adj American 1. inspiring doubt or suspicion; of uncer tain loyalty, origin, etc. This term of unknown derivation is roughly equivalent to the British dodgy 2. cute and/or neat …   Contemporary slang

  • hinky — adj. dishonest; suspicious, nervous …   English contemporary dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”