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junk
1[juhngk]
noun
any old or discarded material, as metal, paper, or rags.
anything that is regarded as worthless, meaningless, or contemptible; trash.
old cable or cordage used when untwisted for making gaskets, swabs, oakum, etc.
Nautical Slang., salt junk.
Baseball Slang., relatively slow, unorthodox pitches that are deceptive to the batter in movement or pace, as knuckleballs or forkballs.
verb (used with object)
to cast aside as junk; discard as no longer of use; scrap.
adjective
cheap, worthless, unwanted, or trashy.
junk
2[juhngk]
noun
a seagoing ship with a traditional Chinese design and used primarily in Chinese waters, having square sails spread by battens, a high stern, and usually a flat bottom.
junk
3[juhngk]
noun
narcotics, especially heroin.
the external genitals.
I kicked him in the junk.
junk
1/ dʒʌŋk /
noun
discarded or secondhand objects, etc, collectively
informal
rubbish generally
nonsense
the play was absolute junk
slang, any narcotic drug, esp heroin
verb
informal, (tr) to discard as junk; scrap
junk
2/ dʒʌŋk /
noun
a sailing vessel used in Chinese waters and characterized by a very high poop, flat bottom, and square sails supported by battens
Word History and Origins
Origin of junk1
Origin of junk2
Word History and Origins
Origin of junk1
Origin of junk2
Example Sentences
This was the junk wax era, when Topps and Fleer and all these companies really overproduced because they thought there was big business in baseball cards.
"Major championships are long, and when you get out here on these blind tee shots with the wind, you're going to have guys hitting it in the junk," said US Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley.
In an effort to counter the worst offenders Cloudflare previously developed a system where the worst miscreants would be sent to a "Labyrinth" of web pages filled with AI generated junk.
Plus he has called on states to ban millions of Americans from using food stamps, a welfare benefit, to buy junk food or sugar-sweetened drinks.
“This is not an evidence-based report, and for all practical purposes, it should be junked at this point,” Georges C. Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Assn. told the Washington Post.
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