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  1. Dictionary
    kin
    /kɪn/

    noun

    • 1. one's family and relations: "many elderly people have no kin to turn to for assistance"

    adjective

    • 1. (of a person) related: "he was kin to the brothers"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. your relatives. relative All my relatives gather every year for a family reunion. extended family He has a very large extended family. relation She is a distant relation of his, though I don't quite remember how. kin He remained true to his kin.

  3. www.mewatch.sg › show › Kin-30405Kin - mewatch

    Best Telenovela - National Winner Asian Academy Creative Awards (2020) | Kin is a drama about the complexities of life, love and family relationships. Years have passed since Yoke and Ella had their lives turned upside-down when they returned to be with their rightful families after having been swapped at birth.

  4. Adjective. Bennett’s musings have an ethical component: if a nuisance tree, or a dead tree, or a dead rat is my kin, then everything is kineven a piece of trash. Morgan Meis, The New Yorker, 28 Feb. 2023 The Oscar winners have been friends for half a century and their kin span generations.

  5. kin in British English. (kɪn ) noun. 1. a person's relatives collectively; kindred. 2. a class or group with similar characteristics. 3. See next of kin.

  6. www.pcsao.org › programs › kinshipPCSAO - Kinship Care

    Child care subsidy and one-time support – The cost of child care can be one of the biggest barriers for kin. The Kinship Caregiver Program is available through your local children services agency and may provide child care subsidies and other necessities for caregivers, such as cribs.

  7. Kin: Created by Ciaran Donnelly, Peter McKenna. With Charlie Cox, Clare Dunne, Aidan Gillen, Emmett J Scanlan. Kin tells the story of a fictional Dublin family embroiled in gangland war and speaks to the enduring unbreakable bonds of blood and family.

  8. From Middle English kin, kyn, ken, kun, from Old English cynn (“kind, sort, rank, quality, family, generation, offspring, pedigree, kin, race, people, gender, sex, propriety, etiquette”), from Proto-Germanic *kunją (“race, generation, descent”), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵenh₁- (“to produce”).

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