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Jink & jinker

Posted by Lotg on October 04, 2003

In Reply to: Get a wriggle on posted by R. Berg on October 03, 2003

: : : To tell someone to get a wriggle on is to tell them to get a move on, hurry up, etc. But why wriggle? How can that speed things up? Anyone know how this started?

: : to 'wriggle' is to squirm or to make progress forward by deviating from the straight course by going left and right in succession. for example if somebody was caving and crawling through a confined space "getting a wriggle on" would get them through quicker.

: : Also the human bottom "wiggles" when walking quickly - somebody could quite properly say "get a wiggle on" meaning to go from normal walking pace to something faster.
: : Either makes sense.

: : there is another good word for wriggling - and that is "jink" - it is often used of attacking football players dodging and twisting their way through tackles - it may be Scottish in origin - my team (Woking FC) used to have a player nick-named "jinky" (Scott Steele) who was a Scot by origin as well as by name.

: "Get a wiggle on" is, or used to be, a common U.S. version. In fact, I haven't heard "wriggle" used in the phrase. I think "wiggle" is used there simply to signify movement or activity of any kind.

I was interested to hear the word 'jink'. Does this have any relevance to 'jinker', as in the kind a horse pulls?

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