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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ChinkChink - Wikipedia

    History. The Iron Chink, a machine that guts and cleans salmon for canning, [9] alongside a Chinese fishplant worker, was marketed as a replacement for fish-butchers, who were primarily Chinese immigrants. The first recorded use of the word chink is from approximately 1880. [10] .

  3. Oct 23, 2018 · Perhaps it is a diminutive of a Frankish word, from Proto-Germanic *kidon-, from PIE *geie-"to sprout, split, open" (see chink (n.1) ). The meaning "an heir, child, a descendant" in English is from mid-14c., a figurative use.

  4. Jun 8, 2024 · “the word “Chink” originated in the 19th Century as a racial slur against people of Chinese descent after a movement was started to expel Chinese workers from the United States”

  5. /tʃɪŋk/ chink. See pronunciation. Where does the noun chink come from? Earliest known use. mid 1500s. The earliest known use of the noun chink is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for chink is from 1545, in a translation by Thomas Raynalde, physician and printer. chink is of uncertain origin. See etymology.

  6. The earliest known use of the word Chink is in the 1880s. OED's earliest evidence for Chink is from 1880, in Manaro Mercury (Cooma, New South Wales).

  7. Sep 1, 2011 · Many people say the word chink originated from the Chinese courtesy ching ching, and also the word China. Other people say it came from the word Qing, as in the Qing dynasty. Qing is pronounced “ching,” so that’s why it’s a possibility.

  8. Aug 9, 2024 · Pronunciation. [edit] (UK, US) IPA (key): /t͡ʃɪŋk/ Audio (Southern England): Rhymes: -ɪŋk. Etymology 1. [edit] Of uncertain origin, but apparently an extension (with diminutive -k) of Middle English chine, from Old English ċine (“a crack, chine, chink”), equivalent to chine +‎ -k.