wrinch
English
Etymology 1
Probably an alteration of wrench.
Verb
wrinch (third-person singular simple present wrinches, present participle wrinching, simple past and past participle wrinched)
- (Bermuda, intransitive) To complain or grouse about.
- 2015 May 28, Christopher Famous, “Giving credit where credit is due”, in The Royal Gazette, archived from the original on 2022-12-11:
- I write this to say that often, far too often, we wrinch about a business or we wrinch about “Bermudians' poor customer service”. Yet in the midst of the wrinching, we forget to acknowledge when we receive excellent service.
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- (Bermuda, transitive) To scold.
- 2013 August 26, @latina_xxx, Twitter:
- My daddies wrinching about how all the women in this house have shoppin problems😆.. Noone told u have 3 girls pops!
- 2022 June 3, @iAmNeilly, Twitter:
- As soon as I got in the chair today, he wrinched me for coming out of character.
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Verb
wrinch (third-person singular simple present wrinches, present participle wrinching, simple past and past participle wrinched)
- Obsolete form of rinse.
References
- “wrinch”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.
- “wrinch”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.