v. rare. [dim. or freq. of JINK v.1] intr. To move with sudden turns or swervings.

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1852.  R. S. Surtees, Sponge’s Sp. Tour, lx. (1893), 324. Our friend jinkled and jolted, and bumped and jumped in the style that characterizes country conveyances.

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1899.  Phil Robinson, in Contemp. Rev., Dec., 800. It [a rabbit] diverts itself with queer sidelong cavorts, piaffes, jinklings, and somersaults.

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