hunky

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See also: Hunky

English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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From hunk +‎ -y.

Adjective

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hunky (comparative hunkier, superlative hunkiest)

  1. (informal) Exhibiting strong, masculine beauty.
  2. Shaped like a hunk, or piece; chunky.
  3. (US, slang) All right; in good condition.
  4. (US, slang) even; square; on equal footing with
    • 1900, Stephen Crane, Wounds in the Rain:
      [] he dropped like a brick into the firing line and began to shoot; began to get "hunky" with all those people who had been plugging at him.
Derived terms
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Etymology 2

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From the older *hunk, probably alteration of Hungarian +‎ -ie/-y. Compare bohunk and honky / honkey.

Alternative forms

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Noun

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hunky (plural hunkies)

  1. (US, slang, now uncommon, ethnic slur) A Hungarian or other eastern European, e.g. a Romanian or a Slav. (Sometimes applied (like honky) to any white person.)
    • 1924, Jack Bethea, Bed Rock, page 175:
      "All hunkies and wops, and no wonder there was seven hundred and fifty of them."
    • 1940, Unemployment Compensation Interpretation Service: Benefit series, page 183:
      He made hunkies and cut ice-cream sandwiches.
    • 1952, Chester Himes, Cast the First Stone, page 66:
      The night before I had let a hunky called Big John have a dollar's worth of chips in the poker game []
    • 1969, Robert Beck (Iceberg Slim), Trick Baby, page 149:
      He said, "I'm going to buy this building and turn this into a Nigger bar. I'm going to bar all you fucking hunkies."
    • 1994, Josephine Wtulich, American Xenophobia and the Slav Immigrant: A Living Legacy of Mind and Spirit:
      On the negative side, a hunky was culturally schizophrenic, an inhabitant of crowded and ill-kept rooms and whose clothing was in poor taste, an alcoholic, intrinsically dull and stupid, an offspring of domineering parents, []
    • 2009, Victor Bockris, Warhol: The Biography[1], page 20:
      Like blacks, who were the only ethnic group below them on the social scale, Eastern Europeans, contemptuously labelled ‘hunkies’, were dismissed as incapable and untrustworthy.

References

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  • “hunky” in the Canadian Oxford Dictionary, Second Edition, Oxford University Press, 2004.