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inkling

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ink⋅ling

[ingk-ling]
–noun
1. a slight suggestion or indication; hint; intimation: They hadn't given us an inkling of what was going to happen.
2. a vague idea or notion; slight understanding: They didn't have an inkling of how the new invention worked.

Origin:
1505–15; obs. inkle to hint (ME inklen) + -ing 1 ; akin to OE inca suspicion
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Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
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in·kling   (ĭng'klĭng)   
n.  
  1. A slight hint or indication.

  2. A slight understanding or vague idea or notion.


[Probably alteration of Middle English (a) ningkiling, (a) hint, suggestion, possibly alteration of nikking, from nikken, to mark a text for correction, from nik, notch, tally, perhaps from variant of Old French niche, niche; see niche.]
Word History: Inkling has nothing to do with ink, but it may have something to do with niches. Our story begins with the Old French (and Modern French) word niche, meaning "niche." It is possible that in Old French a variant form existed that was borrowed into Middle English as nik, meaning "a notch, tally." This word is probably related to the Middle English word nikking, meaning "a hint, slight indication," or possibly "a whisper, mention." Nikking appears only once, in a Middle English text composed around 1400. In another copy of the same text the word ningkiling appears, which may be a variant of nikking. This is essentially our word inkling already, the only major change being an instance of what is called false splitting, whereby people understood a ningkiling as an ingkiling. They did the same thing with a napron, getting an apron.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

inkling 
c.1400, apparently from the gerund of M.E. verb inclen "utter in an undertone" (c.1340), which perhaps is related to O.E. inca "doubt, suspicion."
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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