'Kith and kin' originally meant 'country and kinsfolk'.
"I felt a strong kinship with the people in my community."
The noun kin is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a group of persons of common ancestry; relatives; a word for people.A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition. Example sentence:I met his parents and all his kin at the party.
All of my kin live far from me and far from each other.
As a noun, kin is treated as plural.
use ize in sentence
He was an O'Grady from County Kerry in Ireland - and all of his kith and kin were County Kerry O'Grady's, too.
Kith and kin means friends and acquaintances (kith) and relatives (kin).
kith and kin means your family.
Kith, such as in the phrase "kith and kin", are one's friends - as opposed to kin, who are one's family.
This place is death if any of my kinsman find me here.
Kith and Kin - 2014 is rated/received certificates of: UK:12
Kith and Kin - 1913 was released on: USA: 6 March 1913
Kith and kin.
My friend's kin is strange.
Dan is my kin. kin means family member or relative.
Clara A. Beck has written: 'Kith and kin of George Wolf'
Darlene Sampson Tipton has written: 'Sampson--Anderson kith and kin'