Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective
superlative form ofinky : mostinky .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
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Examples
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Darkness, the blackest, inkiest darkness, rolled over me in waves and hid me so well no Jack
Three Times and Out: A Canadian Boy's Experience in Germany Nellie L. McClung 1918
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And beyond the vale, eastwards and northwards, Catherine looked out upon a wild sea of moors wrapped in mists, sullen and storm-beaten, while to the left the clouds hung deepest and inkiest over the high points of the Ullswater mountains.
Robert Elsmere Humphry Ward 1885
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And beyond the vale, eastward and northward, Catherine looked out upon a wild sea of moors wrapped in mists, sullen and storm-beaten, while to the left the clouds hung deepest and inkiest over the high points of the Ullswater mountains.
Robert Elsmere Humphry Ward 1885
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The top of one pinnacle took the shapely, clean-cut form of a rabbit's head, in the inkiest silhouette, while it rested against the moon.
A Tramp Abroad 1879
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The top of one pinnacle took the shapely, clean-cut form of a rabbit's head, in the inkiest silhouette, while it rested against the moon.
A Tramp Abroad — Volume 07 Mark Twain 1872
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The iPad's blacks were among the inkiest in the group, matching the late model MacBook Pro, beating the Inspiron, and blowing the iPhone out of the water.
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Sardine and mackerel fishing boats, their masts bejeweled with lights, headed out from the city’s harbor for a nighttime haul; far out, an oil tanker flat against the sea, a sugar cube of lights in the inkiest part of the blackening water.
The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008
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Sardine and mackerel fishing boats, their masts bejeweled with lights, headed out from the city’s harbor for a nighttime haul; far out, an oil tanker flat against the sea, a sugar cube of lights in the inkiest part of the blackening water.
The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008
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Sardine and mackerel fishing boats, their masts bejeweled with lights, headed out from the city’s harbor for a nighttime haul; far out, an oil tanker flat against the sea, a sugar cube of lights in the inkiest part of the blackening water.
The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008
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Sardine and mackerel fishing boats, their masts bejeweled with lights, headed out from the city’s harbor for a nighttime haul; far out, an oil tanker flat against the sea, a sugar cube of lights in the inkiest part of the blackening water.
The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008
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