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jinx
[jingks]
verb (used with object)
to bring bad luck to; curse.
According to tradition, wishing an actor “good luck” before a show will jinx their performance.
That place on the corner seems jinxed—no business ever stays there for long.
to destroy the point of.
His sudden laugh jinxed the host's joke.
noun
a person, thing, or influence supposed to bring bad luck.
They said I was a jinx, because every time I came to see them play, they lost.
interjection
(used after two people say exactly the same thing at exactly the same time).
I’ll drive—jinx! Great minds think alike!
jinx
/ dʒɪŋks /
noun
an unlucky or malevolent force, person, or thing
verb
(tr) to be or put a jinx on
Other Word Forms
- outjinx verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Origin of jinx1
Word History and Origins
Origin of jinx1
Example Sentences
Not content with jinxing the Dodgers by predicting a potential “120-win season,” local sports seer Bill Plaschke now projects the Rams to be in the Super Bowl.
Perhaps it was a jinx, but a little more than eight months later, the Gallagher brothers would call it quits on August 22, 2009, at the V Festival in Weston Park, England.
Careful not to jinx his momentum, he is only willing to admit this is "definitely the best first half of a season I've had in a long time", speaking to BBC Sport.
"I don't want to jinx it, but it has been sunny every single year," she says.
Could this be the season he ends the jinx?
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