hunker
verb
- sit on one's heels
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈhʌŋkə/ / /ˈhʌŋkɚ/
name
- A surname
noun
Etymology: Unknown
- A political conservative.
verb
Etymology: Originally Scottish. Origin uncertain, but probably of Germanic origin, perhaps *hunk- a nasalised variant of *huk- (compare Scots hoonk, hounk, variants of huk, hok (“to squat, crouch”); Scots hocker (“to crouch down, hunker”)), all of North Germanic origin, from Old Norse huka (“to crouch”), from Proto-Germanic *hūkan- (“to squat”), from *hūkkan-, back-formed from the iterative *huk(k)ōn-, from Proto-Indo-European *kuk-néh₂, from *kewk- (“to curve, bend”) (also the source of high). Probable cognates include Old Norse húka, Dutch huiken, and German hocken.
- To crouch or squat close to the ground or lie down.
“Get out of the mobile home and hunker in a ditch”
- To apply oneself to a task.