Dink or DINK may refer to:
Places
- Dink, Plovdiv Province, a village in Bulgaria
 - Dink, West Virginia, an unincorporated community in the United States
 - Dink Island, Palmer Archipelago, Antarctica
 
Entertainment
Characters
- Dink Meeker, in the Ender's Game series of books by Orson Scott Card
 - "Dink" Dunkin, a child detective in the A to Z Mysteries novel series
 - Dink Stover, in stories and novels by Owen Johnson
 - Dink, a child character in the 1931 film The Champ, played by Jackie Cooper
 - Dink, in the 1953 film The Clown, a remake of The Champ
 - Dink (James Bond), a woman in the James Bond film Goldfinger
 - Dinks, a group of munchkin-like characters in red robes in the 1987 movie Spaceballs
 - Dink Jenkins, in the 2000 film My Dog Skip, played by Luke Wilson
 - Bud Dink, on the Nickelodeon and Disney television series Doug
 - the title character of Dink, the Little Dinosaur, a 1980s American children's animated series
 - Dink, a recurring character in the TV series Private Practice
 - Dink, in the animated TV series Cubeez
 - the main character of Dink Smallwood, a role-playing video game made in 1997
 
Other
- Dink (band), an American industrial rock band
 - "D.I.N.K", a season 2 episode of Sanjay and Craig
 
People
- Dink (nickname)
 - Arat Dink (born 1979), Turkish journalist
 - Hrant Dink (1954–2007), Turkish-Armenian editor and journalist
 - Claude Giroux (wrestler) (born 1956), midget wrestler who used the ring name Dink
 
Slang
- DINK (Dual Income, No Kids), a working, cohabiting or married couple who do not have children
 - Beanie (seamed cap), occasionally known as a "dink" in the context of American college hazing
 - In first-person shooter games, a headshot that does not kill the player
 - Dinks was one of the derogatory terms used to refer to the Viet Cong or NVA.
 
Sports
- In footvolley, hitting the ball over the net with one's head
 - In pickleball, a soft shot made by a player while near their own non-volley zone, into their opponent's non-volley zone
 - In soccer, chipping the ball lightly
 - In tennis, a soft drop shot
 - In volleyball, tapping the ball just barely over the net after faking a spike
 
See also
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