kiddlywink
English
    
    Etymology
    
Possibly related to tiddlywink or kiddywink.
Noun
    
kiddlywink (plural kiddlywinks)
- (Cornwall, historical) A small pub only licensed to sell beer or cider.
- Synonym: kiddly
 - 1974, Marjorie Watson, Heir to Polventon, →ISBN:- "And we have a notion how much he had to drink in the kiddlywink."
 
- 1980, John Hugh Norton Mason, West country walks and legends, Academy Chicago Pub
- Bessie's Cove was said to be named after a Bessie Burrows who kept a small 'kiddlywink' inn on the cliff-top.
 
- 2011, Patricia Gaffney, Lily, Open Road Media, →ISBN:- There's a kiddlywink there where my crew and l have spent many a happy hour.”
 
 
- (historical) A small village shop.
- (humorous) A child.
- 2007, Ally Blake, Millionaire to the Rescue, Harlequin, →ISBN, page 35:- 'My sweet kiddlywinks, we are going on a car trip into the mountains and there we 'll stay in Danny's house in the rainforest.'
 
- 2013, Anna Kemp, The Great Brain Robbery, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:- Frankie wasn't sure he liked being called a kiddlywink but, as the air fizzed around him, he felt his worries dissolve like a spoonful of sherbet
 
- 2014, Andrea Ashworth, Once in a House on Fire: Picador Classic, Pan Macmillan, →ISBN:- 'Well, kiddlywinks' –she touched her face round the edges– 'we've somebody coming tos ee us. Tomorrow, first thing.'
 
 
Alternative forms
    
- (small pub; small village shop): kiddle-a-wink, kiddleywink
References
    
- (small village shop): 1873, John Camden Hotten, The Slang Dictionary
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