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Definitions

kinfolk

[kin-fohk] / ˈkɪnˌfoʊk /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Of course, like most Americans, we were paying no attention whatsoever to developments in Sudan before the fighting started — and before we learned that our own kinfolk were in danger.

From Salon • Jul. 30, 2023

Cozzens also takes an admirably nuanced approach to the Muscogee, Cherokee and Choctaw, who assisted Jackson over their Red Stick kinfolk, a detail that further complicates simplistic renderings of Indigenous-White relations.

From Washington Post • Apr. 26, 2023

As she watched volunteers pass out turkeys, she said she was “taking care of my kinfolk here.”

From Los Angeles Times • Nov. 25, 2021

And it all started in those early years with her inclination to view trees as kinfolk.

From New York Times • Jul. 30, 2021

Is he afeared of hurtin’ the feelin’s of some of his woman’s kinfolk down in Kaintuck?

From "Across Five Aprils" by Irene Hunt




Vocabulary lists containing kinfolk