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  1. Dictionary
    clinch
    /klɪn(t)ʃ/

    verb

    • 1. confirm or settle (a contract or bargain): "the Texan wanted to impress him to clinch a business deal" Similar securesettleconcludeclose
    • 2. grapple at close quarters, especially (of boxers) so as to be too closely engaged for full-arm blows. Similar grapplewrestlestruggle with each otherscuffle with each other

    noun

    • 1. a struggle or scuffle at close quarters: "breaking from a clinch, he crossed with his right"
    • 2. a knot used to fasten ropes or angling lines, using a half hitch with the end seized back on its own part.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of CLINCH is clench. How to use clinch in a sentence. clench; to turn over or flatten the protruding pointed end of (a driven nail); also : to treat (a screw, a bolt, a rivet, etc.) in a similar way…

  3. CLINCH definition: 1. to finally get or win something: 2. to make someone decide what to do after a lot of thought or…. Learn more.

  4. clinch. (klɪntʃ ) Word forms: plural, 3rd person singular present tense clinches , present participle clinching , past tense, past participle clinched. 1. verb. If you clinch something you are trying to achieve, such as a business deal or victory in a contest, you succeed in obtaining it.

  5. Clinch definition: to settle (a matter) decisively. See examples of CLINCH used in a sentence.

  6. When you clinch something, you confirm it, the way you clinch a deal with your brother to trade chores next week by shaking hands on it. The verb clinch arose as a variation of clench , and its original meaning was "fix securely (a driven nail) by bending and beating it back."

  7. to make someone decide what to do after a lot of thought or discussion: When they said the job would involve traveling to Paris, that clinched it ( for her) (= that made her certain that she wanted the job). See more. clinch. noun [ C ]

  8. Verb. Noun. Filter. verb. clinched, clinches, clinching. To secure (a nail, bolt, etc. that has been driven through something) by bending or flattening the projecting end. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To fasten firmly together by this means.

  9. 1. If you clinch something you are trying to achieve, such as a business deal or victory in a contest, you succeed in obtaining it. [...] 2. The thing that clinches an uncertain matter settles it or provides a definite answer. [...] More. Conjugations of 'clinch' present simple: I clinch, you clinch [...] past simple: I clinched, you clinched [...]

  10. Define clinch. clinch synonyms, clinch pronunciation, clinch translation, English dictionary definition of clinch. secure; settle: clinch the deal; hold, as in boxing: The fighters were in a clinch. Not to be confused with: clench – grip tightly: Clench the tool firmly...

  11. to provide the answer to something; to settle something that was not certain. clinch something These findings clinched the matter. clinch it ‘I'll pay your airfare.’ ‘OK, that clinches it—I'll come with you.’. a clinching argument. Word Origin. See clinch in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Check pronunciation: clinch.