Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun slang The penis.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

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Examples

  • I mean, hon my winkie is a lot bigger than I-RIGHT-I’s little bitty one.

    Think Progress » McCain: Murtha “Has Become Too Emotional” 2005

  • And the intro photo to the Gospel of Luke probably didn't need to show a mother holding a baby, with the baby's "winkie" in full view, but then again, the intent is to show realistic, meaningful photos to create a sensory experience when reading the Bible.

    Clever Dude Finances & Life 2008

  • The misunderstood retard next door was named Boo Radley, what a co-winkie!

    What celebrity would you name your pet after? | EW.com 2009

  • They flaunt their manufactured sensibilities like a flasher waggling what Mr Brand would call his winkie. before going on to ask some pertinent questions after all.

    Archive 2008-11-01 2008

  • They flaunt their manufactured sensibilities like a flasher waggling what Mr Brand would call his winkie. before going on to ask some pertinent questions after all.

    Britblog Roundup 194: The one done from home 2008

  • I clicked on the unsafe for work version by mistake and saw some guy's shaved winkie.

    A World Gone Nuts: Missing Junk and Missing Pants BikeSnobNYC 2009

  • When I put my eye to the hole I see one holding horsedung to the rain in the hope, indeed, indeed, of washing out a few whole ears of grain with a wink and a wink and a winkie-wick.

    Slime Me Tim Jones-Yelvington 2009

  • Isn't that like that old saw about if you don't want trouble from a man you're using in your book, just give him a small winkie?

    The Great Character Co-opt 2007

  • Maybe even Jason Kenney casts a lonely glance at his untouched lap and tries to hold back a sob before deleting the ads promising to enlargen his little winkie.

    Selling Your Privacy By The Pound Lindsay Stewart 2009

  • At first glance, the refrain and its variations are baffling, but it becomes clear that the poem deals with each of the five senses, one to a stanza, and plays off them in the refrain line: the pinkie-pick for touch; the clinky-click for hearing; the stinky-stick for smell; winkie-wick for sight, and linky-lick for taste — this last also linking him to his ancestors.

    It May Sound Funny 2006

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