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See also: Winch

English

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /wɪnt͡ʃ/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪntʃ

Etymology 1

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From Middle English wynche, from Old English winċe, from Proto-Germanic *winkijǭ, ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European *weng- (to bow, bend, arch, curve), whence also wink.

Noun

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winch (plural winches)

  This entry has been listed on Category:Copyright violations suspected.
Sense 2 appears to have been copied from the Glossary section of Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore (JLOTS) 4-01.6. As introduced in 2006], it was word-for-word identical, and remains almost identical. The sense also included "(FM 50-501)" until 2024, which refers to the Marine Crewman's Handbook, which, in some editions, may also have included this gloss.

This notice was added by including the template {{copyvio suspected}} in the entry.

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  1. A machine consisting of a drum on an axle, a friction brake or ratchet and pawl, and a crank handle or prime mover (often an electric or hydraulic motor), with or without gearing, to give increased mechanical advantage when hoisting or hauling on a rope or cable.
  2. (nautical) A hoisting machine used for loading or discharging cargo, or for hauling in lines.
    • 2013, J. M. Coetzee, chapter 27, in The Childhood of Jesus, Melbourne, Australia: The Text Publishing Company, page 267:
      It runs on clattering steel tracks; the driver sits in a cab over the tracks, operating the controls that rotate the arm and turn the winch.
  3. A wince (machine used in dyeing or steeping cloth).
  4. A kick, as of an animal, from impatience or uneasiness.
  5. (Nigeria, slang) A witch.
Derived terms
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Descendants
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  • Tok Pisin: winis
  • Arabic: وِنْش (winš)
  • Japanese: ウインチ (uinchi)
  • Korean: 원치 (wonchi)
  • Norwegian Bokmål: vinsj
  • Norwegian Nynorsk: vinsj
  • Serbo-Croatian: vȉnč
  • Swahili: winchi
  • Swedish: vinsch
  • Ottoman Turkish: وینچ (vinç)
Translations
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Verb

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winch (third-person singular simple present winches, present participle winching, simple past and past participle winched)

  1. To use a winch
    Winch in those sails, lad!
Translations
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Etymology 2

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See wince.

Verb

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winch (third-person singular simple present winches, present participle winching, simple past and past participle winched)

  1. To wince; to shrink
    • 1812, Joanna Baillie, The Dream, part Act 1:
      It is not the first time a cat-o'-nine-tails has been across my back for other men's misdeeds. Promise me a good flask of brandy when I'm done with it, and I warrant ye I'll never winch.
  2. To kick with impatience or uneasiness.

Etymology 3

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Variant form of wench.

Verb

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winch (third-person singular simple present winches, present participle winching, simple past and past participle winched)

  1. (Scotland, colloquial, transitive, intransitive) to court
    • 1935, Lennox Kerr, Woman of Glenshiels:
      They “clicked” each other, kidded each other, and by and by they would “winch” and marry each other.
    • 2020, Douglas Stuart, Shuggie Bain, page 59:
      It was common knowledge that he'd winched dozens of girls while she had been sharing a bedroom with her two brothers.
  2. (Scotland, colloquial, transitive, intransitive) to snog
    • 1998, Alan Spence, Way to go, page 61:
      She turned and looked at me, amused, gave a wee chuckle, kissed me on the mouth hard and quick, and again, and we were kissing for real, lingering, soft and moist and warm, me and Jeannie winching, and I wanted it not to stop.
    • 2020, Douglas Stuart, Shuggie Bain, page 58:
      Up at the cinema Campbell Cameron had been all slithering hands, like a dirty octopus. Even his tenderest winching had felt entitled and demanding.

French

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Noun

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winch m (plural winchs)

  1. (nautical) winch

Further reading

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