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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

inkling

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 18 August 2023

⏱️ 2 minutes

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Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 18, 2023 is:

inkling • \INK-ling\  • noun

Inkling refers to a slight, uncertain idea about something, or to a slight amount of knowledge about something.

// As the professor explained the complex math formula in class, I didn’t have an inkling of what it all meant.

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Examples:

“It was in Jim [Melchert]’s class that I first felt the inkling that there was more to being an artist than simply expressing yourself. It was also about paying attention—looking closely and curiously—and being open to where it might take you.” — Sharon Mizota, The Los Angeles Times, 5 June 2023

Did you know?

This may come as a surprise, but inkling has not a drop to do with ink, whether of squid, tattoo, or any other variety. Originating in English in the early 16th century, inkling comes instead from Middle English yngkiling, meaning “whisper or mention,” and perhaps further back from the verb inclen, meaning “to hint at.” An early sense of the word meant “a faint perceptible sound or undertone” or “rumor,” but now people usually use the word to refer to a vague notion someone has (“had an inkling they would be there”), or to a hint of something present (“a conversation with not even an inkling of anger”). One related word you might not have heard of is the rare verb inkle, a back-formation of inkling that in some British English dialects can mean “to utter or communicate in an undertone or whisper, to hint, give a hint of” or “to have an idea or notion of.” (Inkle is also a noun referring to “a colored linen tape or braid woven on a very narrow loom and used for trimming” but etymologists don’t have an inkling of where that inkle came from.)



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Merriam Webster's Word of the Day for August 18th.

0:11.4

Today's word is inkling, spelled I-N-K-L-I-N-G.

0:17.6

Inkling is a noun.

0:18.8

It refers to a slight uncertain idea about something, or to a slight amount of knowledge

0:24.0

about something.

0:25.0

Here's the word used in a sentence from the Los Angeles Times by Sharon Mazata.

0:30.9

It was in Jim Melcher's class that I first felt the inkling that there was more to

0:35.7

being an artist than simply expressing yourself.

0:39.1

It was also about paying attention, looking closely and curiously, and being open to where

0:44.3

it might take you.

0:46.6

This may come as a surprise, but the word inkling has not a drop to do with the word ink,

0:52.5

whether of squid, tattoo, or any other variety.

0:56.0

Originating in English in the early 16th century, inkling comes instead from the middle

1:01.6

English word inkling, spelled with a Y, meaning whisper or mention, and perhaps further

1:08.5

back from the verb inklan, meaning to hint at.

1:13.2

An early sense of the word meant a faint perceptible sound or undertone or rumor, but now people

1:18.6

usually use the word to refer to a vague notion that someone has had an inkling that they

1:25.1

would be there, for instance, or to a hint of something present, as in a conversation

1:30.8

with not even an inkling of anger.

1:34.5

One related word you might not have heard of is the rare verb inkle, i.n.k.l.e., a

1:41.0

back formation of inkling, that in some British English dialects can mean to utter or communicate

1:46.7

in an undertone or whisper, to hint, to give a hint of, or to have an idea or notion of.

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