Wink
đ
From Middle English winken (strong verb) and Middle English winken (weak verb), from Old English *wincan (strong verb) and wincian (âto wink, make a sign, close the eyes, blinkâ, weak verb), from Proto-Germanic *winkanÄ (âto move side to side, swayâ), *winkĆn (âto close one's eyesâ), from Proto-Indo-European *weng- (âto bow, bend, arch, curveâ). Cognate with Middle Low German winken (âto blink, winkâ), German winken (âto nod, beckon, make a signâ). Related also to Saterland Frisian wÀÀnke, Dutch wenken (âto beckon, motionâ), Latin vacillare (âswayâ), Lithuanian vĂ©ngti (âto swerve, avoidâ), Albanian vang (âtire, felloeâ), Sanskrit à€”à€à„à€à€€à€ż (vañcati, âhe swaggersâ).
đ
The root ghayn mÄ«m zÄy (Űș Ù ŰČ)