chunk

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
14
Words With Friends
16
Letters
5
Pronunciation
/t͡ʃʌŋk/

Definition of chunk

12 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. A part of something that has been separated; a generally squat, thick, irregular piece of something, e.g. wood or stone.
    “The statue broke into chunks.”
    “a chunk of granite”
    “Daylight, between mouthfuls, fed chunks of ice into the tin pot, where it thawed into water. […] Daylight cut up generous chunks of bacon and dropped them in the pot of bubbling beans.”
    “Until the main road from Hatfield to Hertford was diverted a few years ago, heavy lorries trundling through the village sometimes knocked chunks off corner buildings, but now the village has regained much of its former tranquillity.”
See all 12 definitions

noun

  1. A part of something that has been separated; a generally squat, thick, irregular piece of something, e.g. wood or stone.
    “The statue broke into chunks.”
    “a chunk of granite”
    “Daylight, between mouthfuls, fed chunks of ice into the tin pot, where it thawed into water. […] Daylight cut up generous chunks of bacon and dropped them in the pot of bubbling beans.”
    “Until the main road from Hatfield to Hertford was diverted a few years ago, heavy lorries trundling through the village sometimes knocked chunks off corner buildings, but now the village has regained much of its former tranquillity.”
  2. A part of something that has been separated; a generally squat, thick, irregular piece of something, e.g. wood or stone.
    “I'd be willing to bet a chunk of my retirement that the number hasn't decreased.”
    “[…] she'd be willing to bet a chunk of change this would be one of the nicest rooms Kate-Lynn Bowers had ever slept in: it was the sort of place you'd think twice about running away from.”
  3. A sequence of two or more words that occur in language with high frequency but are not idiomatic.
    “In fact, some linguists suggest that 45 percent to 60 percent of what you produce in your L1 is functional chunks of language. These chunks of language also give you some sense of fluency.”
  4. A discrete segment of a file, stream, etc. (especially one that represents audiovisual media); a block.
    “The first DWORD of a chunk data in the RIFF chunk is a four character code value identifying the form type of the file.”
    “Each peer downloads the desired file, in chunks, from a multitude of other peers. While downloading missing chunks, peers upload to other peers in the same torrent the chunks they have already obtained.”
  5. A segment of a comedian's performance.
    “You begin gathering two hours of dependable comedy by developing that first three-minute chunk. When you're satisfied with it, you create another three minutes of laughs, then another three minutes.”
    “If you're gigging outdoors for the Society of Catholic Gardeners, don't close your set with your "Papa Beelzebub" chunk (no matter how life affirming you think it is!).”
  6. (alt-of, archaic)Archaic form of chank (“type of spiral shell”).

verb

  1. (transitive)To break into large pieces or chunks.
  2. (transitive)To break down (language, etc.) into conceptual pieces of manageable size.
    “These results offer tentative evidence that suggests that certain components of computer-mediated instruction (in this case, access to and control over syntactically chunked, captioned video) are not necessarily beneficial for certain learners […]”
  3. (Southern-US, slang, transitive)To throw.
    “Calpurnia said it was hard on Helen, because she had to walk nearly a mile out of her way to availed the Ewells, who, according to Helen, “chunked at her” the first time she tried to use the public road.”
  4. (Appalachia, intransitive)To add wood to a fire or to stoke it.
  5. (transitive)Deal a substantial amount of damage to an opponent.
    “He's chunked right before the next battle so he has to regen HP.”
  6. (transitive)To remove a chunk from.
    “"Mind you keep very still," he said, "or I might chunk a bit out of you with the spade."”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Variant of chuck; or alternatively a diminutive of chump (“chunk; block”) + *-k (diminutive suffix) (compare hunk from hump, etc.). Also compare Dutch schonk.

Words you can make from chunk

6 playable · top: HUCK (13 pts)

Best play huck 13 points

4-letter words

1 word

3-letter words

1 word

2-letter words

3 words

Hooks

2 extensions · 2 back

A single letter you can add to chunk to make another valid word.

Find your best play with chunk

See every word you can make from a set of letters that includes chunk, or browse word lists you can mine for high-scoring plays.