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English
Etymology
Clipping of hanky-panky
Noun
hanky-pank (countable and uncountable, plural hanky-panks)
- Synonym of hanky-panky
1920, William Dunseath Eaton, Spirit Life: Or, Do We Die?, page 264:He was interested at once, and also at once made proclamation that all such performances were "hanky-pank," and that he could duplicate any of them.
1972, Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board:In specific explanation of Kaplan's wire of 10:30, Long testified that Kaplan returned his call shortly before 10:30 and that, after reviewing the developments beginning with Babcock's wire to Kaplan the previous afternoon, he and Kaplan concluded that there was some “hanky-pank going on” looking toward “instigat[ion of] a suit,” and that because of these “fears, ' Attorney Kaplan, without either of them knowing that Babcock had canceled Robertson's contract, sent Babcock the previously quoted wire concerning the Union's purpose in picketing.
1973, North western reporter. Second series. N.W. 2d. Cases argued and determined in the courts of Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin:Defendant attempted through cross-examination of Rossman and prosecutrix to discover the activities in the Rossman vehicle prior to prosecutrix leaving that vehicle. Defendant was not permitted to ask Rossman whether any “hanky-pank” had gone on in the Rossman vehicle.
2000, Mitchell Rosnov, Black Magic, →ISBN, page 108:After two years of hanky pank she got the mumps.
- (slang) A carnival game which guarantees a winner.
1981, California Legislature. Joint Committee on Fairs Allocation and Classification, Meeting, California State Legislature, Joint Committee on Fairs Allocation and Classification:That means if you book a couple of games of hanky pank, I'll allow you to book an alibi with them so if the kids win something we will rip off dad, that seems fair.
2003, Bret Witter, Carnival Undercover, page 88:The carny's goal is to get you to keep playing the game, and plunking down cash, until you get enough credits to trade up to a better prize. For this reason, hanky-panks are commonly referred to as trade-ups. The classic hanky-pank is Duck Pond (sometimes played as Fish Pond).
2008, Darryl Wimberley, Kaleidoscope, page 96:Not everything was a flattie. "This here 'Fish the Bottle' is hanky-pank," Tommy noted, which in the carney's twisted lingo meant it was honest.
2012, Dean Koontz, Twilight Eyes, →ISBN:They had closed up their hanky-panks, grab-joints, pitch-and-dunks, pokerino parlours, had turned off the lights and killed the music and folded up the gaudy glamour.
- A nonce word.
1906, The Postal Record - Volume 19, page 210:... him that that was none of his dad-blamed hanky-pank business, although I ached to tell him that and several other things.
1911, The Motor Car Journal - Volume 13, page 613:Look here," said Jones ; " I don't want to be rude, but none of your hanky-pank."
1909 -, Donald Grayson -, Bob Steele's Motor Cycle: Or, True to His Friends, page 13:“What's Chub trying to invent now?” queried Bob, as he and Susie started around the house on the trail of Perkins. “I think it's smokeless powder,” replied Susie. “Great hanky-pank!” gasped Bob.
Verb
hanky-pank (third-person singular simple present hanky-panks, present participle hanky-panking, simple past and past participle hanky-panked)
- To engage in hanky-panky.
1970, Borden Deal -, Interstate, page 362:He knew why he was so deeply angry: this situation had corrupted a fine young engineer, had lost him to the profession, while he, Drew, had hanky-panked with the enemy in the deluded belief that the conflict was not real.
1990 -, Ellen Goodman, Making Sense, →ISBN, page 41:A man who hated communism and never "hanky-panked" with his secretary despite her "God- given beauty."
1995, United States Congress Senate Select Committee on Ethics, Documents Related to the Investigation of Senator Robert Packwood:A person in innocent until proven guilty, if you hanky-panked 20 years ago with an office-staff member, or even tried to and was rejected , you are part, of an unusual group of phylum humn being.
2005, Marc Estrin, The Education of Arnold Hitler, page 251:Professors don't hanky-pank students.