出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/20 22:45 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 kinken, kynken, from 古期英語 *cincian (attested in cincung), from Proto-West Germanic *kinkōn, from Proto-Germanic *kinkōną (“to laugh”), from Proto-Indo-European *gang- (“to mock, jeer, deride”), related to 古期英語 canc (“jeering, scorn, derision”). Cognate with Dutch kinken (“to kink, cough”).
kink (third-person singular simple present kinks, present participle kinking, simple past and past participle kinked)
From Dutch kink (“a twist or curl in a rope”), from Proto-Germanic *kenk-, *keng- (“to bend, turn”), from Proto-Indo-European *gengʰ- (“to turn, wind, braid, weave”). Compare Saterland Frisian Kink (“twist or entanglement in a rope or cord”), Middle Low German kinke (“spiral screw, coil”), Old Norse kikna (“to bend backwards, sink at the knee”), Icelandic kengur (“a bend or bight; a metal crook”). Probably related to kick.
kink (countable and uncountable, plural kinks)
kink (third-person singular simple present kinks, present participle kinking, simple past and past participle kinked)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2009/12/03 13:03 UTC 版)
KinK is a Canadian documentary television series, which first aired in 2001 on Showcase. The series profiles some of the more unusual edges of human sexuality, primarily the kink and fetish scenes. It is filmed in Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver and Winnipeg; the fifth season, set in Halifax, Nova Scotia, first aired in September 2006. KinK is produced by Vancouver's Paperny Films.
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