[Cf. CHINK v.3] trans. and intr. To chink; to make, or cause to make, a short metallic sound. Hence Jinking vbl. sb.
1828. Craven Dial., Jink, to chink or jingle.
1848. Frasers Mag., XXXVIII. 83. A dog barked, and jinked his chain upon the stones.
1888. Amélie Rives, Quick or Dead? (1889), 20. An old spinet from which Miss Fridiswig used to coax forth ghastly jinkings (this spinet could not utter anything so liquid as a jingle).
1898. [see JINK sb.2].