PLUNK vs PLONK: NOUN
- A heavy blow or stroke.
- A short hollow twanging sound.
- A hard, dull blow: as, to hit one a plunk.
- A hollow twanging sound
- A large sum of money.
- Act or sound of plunking.
- A dollar.
- A twang; a twanging sound: as, the plunk-plunk of the banjo.
- (baseball) hitting a baseball so that it drops suddenly
- Cheap or inferior everyday wine.
- (dated, UK, law enforcement, slang) 1970s UK police slang for a female police constable.
- The sound of something solid landing.
- Cheap or inferior wine.
- A cheap wine of inferior quality
- The noise of something dropping (as into liquid)
PLUNK vs PLONK: VERB
- To drop or throw heavily (onto or into something) so that it makes a sound
- Set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noise
- Make or move along with a sound as of a horse's hooves striking the ground
- Drop steeply
- Pull lightly but sharply with a plucking motion
- Set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noise
- To set or toss (something) down carelessly.
- To automatically ignore a particular poster; to killfile.
PLUNK vs PLONK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To emit a hollow twanging sound.
- To drop or fall abruptly or heavily; plump.
- To play truant, or “hooky”.
- To drop or sink down suddenly or heavily; to plump.
- To make a quick, hollow, metallic, or harsh sound, as by pulling hard on a taut string and quickly releasing it; of a raven, to croak.
- To strum or pluck (a stringed instrument).
- To throw or place heavily or abruptly.
- N/A
PLUNK vs PLONK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To be a truant from (school).
- To throw, push, drive heavily, plumply, or suddenly; ; also, to hit or strike.
- To pluck and release quickly (a musical string); to twang.
- N/A
PLUNK vs PLONK: ADVERB
- With a short hollow thud
- Exactly; precisely.
- Precisely and forcefully.
PLUNK vs PLONK: INTERJECTION
- N/A
- The sound made by something solid landing.
- The supposed sound of adding a user to one's killfile.
PLUNK vs PLONK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Suddenly; plump: as, he came plunk against the half-open door.
- To plunge or drop down abruptly.
- To croak or cry as a raven.
- To make or emit an abrupt and usually heavy sound: especially used of the rough sounding of a stringed instrument, and sometimes strung out with arbitrary variations (as in the quotation).
- To pluck (a stringed instrument) so as to produce a low or deep sound; in general, twang.
- To shoot; fill full of ‘lead’ (missiles).
- To knock (away); knock (from).
- To strike suddenly, with a dull sound; knock; bang: as, they plunked him with stones.
- N/A
PLUNK vs PLONK: RELATED WORDS
- Put, Flump, Plunk down, Plump down, Plank, Clump, Dive, Clunk, Pick, Plunge, Plump, Clop, Pluck, Plonk, Plop
- Rioja, Chardonnay, Vin ordinaire, Shandy, Beer, Wine, Glug, Swill, Plunk down, Plump down, Flump, Plank, Plump, Plunk, Plop
PLUNK vs PLONK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Plink, Ker, Ask, Put, Plump down, Plank, Clump, Dive, Clunk, Pick, Plunge, Plump, Clop, Plonk, Plop
- Ponce, Valpolicella, Rioja, Chardonnay, Vin ordinaire, Shandy, Beer, Wine, Glug, Swill, Plump down, Plank, Plump, Plunk, Plop
PLUNK vs PLONK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Plunk some coffee cubes in your iced coffee.
- Before you plunk a shed down on your property, keep these practical concerns in mind.
- This may not make much sense, but see the next plunk for an example.
- Services were conducted on Friday, Feb. 25 at the Plunk Funeral Home in Camden.
- Float fish with bigger bobbers or cast out a few ounces to plunk.
- To plunk the bait, you should purchase lead weights.
- Finally, you are ready to plunk out the melody.
- Plunk on the telephone, anxious to gauge his condition.
- It drops with a PLUNK into the river below.
- Grandchildren: Corey Lee Baumgartner, Dustin James Hustead, Loren David Plunk, Devon Lethaniel Marquardson, Erin Kathleen Plunk, and Kaleb Elwin Marquardson.
- PLINK PLONK is also the place where the full accelerating Estonian record label SEKSOUND officially launches its releases number two and three.
- If the little ones are doing your head in, plonk them in front of Peppa Pig or Spongebob.
- A great place to stock up on some decent local plonk before heading up the mountain.
- All orders are shipped persistently one capacity day of the word used when killfiling SOMA is 'plonk'.
- Much of it is plonk that lands in French hypermarkets, but there are steals to be found.
- Peter Schwartz, David Babington and Audrey Plonk deserve special recognition for making the workshop a success.
- Spirit and gave them a boule of c heap plonk in irs place.
- He lifted the champagne bottle to his lips and guzzled down more plonk.
- Developers are indeed very creative in getting investors to plonk down money.
- And on, it no longer gets plonk down up at all.
PLUNK vs PLONK: QUESTIONS
- What is Plunk's next-generation home valuation platform?
- When did Plonk become a derogatory term for female police officers?