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bunch "

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    • \ ˈbənch \

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    [Noun]  | "bunch" | \ ˈbənch \


    1: protuberance, swelling

    2: a number of things of the same kind

    3: group


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English bunche;

    [Verb]  | "bunch" 


    1: swell, protrude

    2: to form a group or cluster —often used with up

    3: to form into a bunch


    Origin: 14th century ;

    [Noun phrase]  | "the pick of the bunch" 


    1: the best one of a group

    [Idiom]  | "thanks a bunch/lot/million" 


    1: thank you very much —often used in an ironic way to say that one is not pleased that someone has done or said something

    [Noun]  | "bunch" 


    1: a group of people sharing a common interest and relating together socially;


      * e.g., " ... that bunch goes out to lunch together every Friday "





    2: a number of things considered as a unit;


      * e.g., " ... bought a bunch of grapes "





    3: a usually small number of persons considered as a unit;


      * e.g., " ... a small bunch of people were sent to clean up the place "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "bunch" 


    1: to extend outward beyond a usual point;


      * e.g., " ... the dress bunches a bit at the waist "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: to gather into a closely packed group;


      * e.g., " ... the slow service caused the customers at the pick-up counter to bunch up "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "bunch" ]

    1: affectionate term used when addressing a good friend, often accompanied by adjectives like silly, cutie, funny and alike.

      * e.g.,  ... "You know what I don't understand? How come... ?" 

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: A considerable amount of things of the same kind.

      * e.g.,  ... I've got a bunch of speeding tickets. 

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: v. To become extremely uptight at the slightest provocation, resulting in the unyielding bunching of one's panties.

      * e.g.,  ... Kelly became firmly bunched when her ex picked the children up five minutes early.  

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: to royally fuck something up beyond any hope of recovery

      * e.g.,  ... Gregg, what the fuck! You royally bunched that up! We're screwed! 

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: a woman's vagina

      * e.g.,  ... did you get to see her bunch? 

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: The collective term for a males genitalia (penis, scrotum and balls)

      * e.g.,  ... "ow, she just kicked me in the bunch" OR, "Johnny sat in the corner all day playing with his bunch".  

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: A buncher is someone who collects or steals animals to sell to dogfighters or laboratories. The most common occurrences of bunching are free-to-good-home advertisements, animals tied up outside shops, and animals left unsupervised in front yards.

      * e.g.,  ... Someone left their dog tied up outside the store, we can bunch it and sell it as fighting bait. 

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: insult, combining the words "bitch" and "cunt". Most commonly used toward women. Useful because it flys under the radar of unsuspecting recipients.

      * e.g.,  ... "Stacy is such a bunch. She needs to stop acting as though the world revolves around her".  

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: To punch someone in the face with one's balls.

      * e.g.,  ... Balls in the face bitch i will bunch you 

     [ "bunch" ]

    1: adj. Brit. slang. Used to describe excellence, brilliance or greatness.

      * e.g.,  ...  If someone bought me a Nebuchadnezzar of Louis Roederer Cristal, that would be so bunch! 


     [ "bunch" ]

    2: Synonyms: cool, rad, mega, fab, wicked.

      * e.g.,  ...  The GarageJam DVD, in which I appear, will be released soon: bunch! 


     [ "bunch" ]

    3: Developed in the Red Lion public house, Waverton Street, Mayfair, London, on 28 September 200 I'd just finished a GarageJam dance class, for which I'd worn my hair in bunches, and to indicate to my drinking pals (Lucy, Brent and Rita) that the class had been brilliant I punched the mid-air with both fists, as though holding my bunches, saying, "that class was bunches!" By the end of the evening ‘bunches’ had become truncated to ‘bunch’. If something is even more than ‘bunch’, it can be indicated by raising one's hands to punch higher in the air, as though clasping handle-bar bunches (popular in the 1970s); this becomes ‘handle-bar bunch’, truncated to ‘h-b bunch’, and then transposed to ‘hair-bear bunch’, in reminiscence of that ‘bunch’ cartoon (also of the 1970s).

      * e.g.,  ...  Brent's party is going to be hair-bear bunch!! 

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