dunk

The act or instance of dunking, particularly in basketball.

Noun

  1. The act or instance of dunking, particularly in basketball.
    • The point guard threaded a pass with pinpoint precision to the power forward for an easy dunk.
    • She gave the biscuit a dunk in her cup of milk.
    • To rattle the rats to the point where their stress response remained demonstrably hyperactive, the researchers exposed the animals to four weeks of varying stressors: moderate electric shocks, being encaged with...

Origin

From Pennsylvania German dunke, from Middle High German dunken, from Old High German dunkōn (“to dip, submerge, dunk”), from Proto-West Germanic *þunkōn (“to make wet”), possibly from Proto-Germanic *þunkōną, from Proto-Indo-European *teng- (“to moisten, wet”). Cognate with German tunken (“to dunk”), Latin tingō (“to wet, moisten”), Ancient Greek τέγγω (téngō, “to wet, moisten”). Related to taint, tincture, tint.

Forms

dunks

Related

alley oop jam slam

Derived

dunkable dunker dunkfest dunk shot dunk tank mosquito dunk reverse dunk slam dunk thunderdunk

Verb

  1. To submerge briefly in a liquid.
    • I like to dunk my donut in my apple cider.
  2. To set down carelessly.
    • Parents shouldn't just dunk their kids in front of the TV.
  3. To put the ball directly downward through the hoop while grabbing onto the rim with power.
    • The center spun quickly and dunked the ball with authority.
  4. To put down on social media [with on].

Forms

dunks dunking dunked

Derived

dunkable dunker dunk on dunk out