The AI-powered English dictionary
plural winkles
A periwinkle or its shell, of family Littorinidae. quotations examples
[…] because the inward Eare is intorted like a winkle-shell, and hangeth as a bell in thee steeple of the body, it easily perceiueth all appulsions of the Ayre.
1615, Helkiah Crooke, Mikrokosmographia, a Description of the Body of Man, London: William Jaggard, Book 8, Chapter 25, p. 610
Shrimps and winkles are the staple commodities of the afternoon trade, which lasts from three to half-past five in the evening. These articles are generally bought by the working-classes for their tea.
1851, Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor, volume 1, London: G. Newbold, page 64
Sometimes late at night men would come in with a pail of winkles they had bought cheap, and share them out.
1933 January 9, George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], chapter XXV, in Down and Out in Paris and London, London: Victor Gollancz […], page 181
Briony was on her knees, trying to put her arms round Lola and gather her to her, but the body was bony and unyielding, wrapped tight about itself like a seashell. A winkle.
2001, Ian McEwan, chapter 13, in Atonement, Toronto: Vintage Canada
Any one of various marine spiral gastropods, especially, in the United States, either of two species Busycotypus canaliculatus and Busycon carica. quotations examples
There were also found fragments of the winkle (Fulgar carica).
1912, Daniel Melancthon Tredwell, Personal Reminiscences of Men and Things on Long Island
The conchs or winkles, Busycon carica (fig. 204, opp. p. 216) and B. canaliculata, ... He gave the estimate of one planter who believed that one winkle was able to destroy a bushel of oysters in a single hour.
1931, Bureau of Fisheries Document, volume 922, page 217
In Connecticut, the so-called "winkle" chowder is made from B. [Busycon] canaliculatum.
1969, Frank E. Firth, The encyclopedia of marine resources, page 139
(childish, slang) The penis, especially that of a child rather than that of an adult. quotations
After all, he didn't want his winkle to get so big it became unruly and unnatural.
2004, Robert Priest, How to Swallow a Pig
third-person singular simple present winkles, present participle winkling, simple past and past participle winkled
Synonym of winkle out (“to acquire or extract with difficulty”) quotations examples
2023 October 11, “Scientists winkle a secret from the `Mona Lisa’ about how Leonardo painted the masterpiece”, in AP News, Associated Press