bunch

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A group of similar things, either growing together, or in a cluster or clump, usually fastened together.
  2. The peloton; the main group of riders formed during a race.
  3. An informal body of friends.
  4. A considerable amount.
  5. An unmentioned amount; a number.
  6. A group of logs tied together for skidding.
  7. An unusual concentration of ore in a lode or a small, discontinuous occurrence or patch of ore in the wallrock.
  8. The reserve yarn on the filling bobbin to allow continuous weaving between the time of indication from the midget feeler until a new bobbin is put in the shuttle.
  9. An unfinished cigar, before the wrapper leaf is added.
  10. A protuberance; a hunch; a knob or lump; a hump.
  11. A seventeenth-century unit of Rhenish glass, 60 of which constitute a way or web.
verb
  1. To gather into a bunch.
  2. To gather fabric into folds.
  3. To form a bunch.
  4. To be gathered together in folds
  5. To protrude or swell
name
  1. A surname.
  2. An unincorporated community and census-designated place in Adair County, Oklahoma, United States, named after Cherokee Rabbit Bunch.

Pronunciation

/bʌntʃ/ /bʌnʃ/ en-us-bunch.ogg

Word forms

bunch bunches bunching bunched

Etymology

From Middle English bunche, bonche (“hump, swelling”), of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant of *bunge (compare dialectal bung (“heap, grape bunch”)), from Proto-Germanic *bunkō, *bunkô, *bungǭ (“heap, crowd”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰenǵʰ-, *bʰénǵʰus (“thick, dense, fat”). Cognates include Saterland Frisian Bunke (“bone”), West Frisian bonke (“bone, lump, bump”), Dutch bonk (“lump, bone”), Low German Bunk (“bone”), German Bunge (“tuber”), Danish bunke (“heap, pile”), Faroese bunki (“heap, pile”); Hittite [Term?] (/⁠panku⁠/, “total, entire”), Tocharian B pkante (“volume, fatness”), Lithuanian búožė (“knob”), Ancient Greek παχύς (pakhús, “thick”), Sanskrit बहु (bahú, “thick; much”)). Alternatively, perhaps from a variant or diminutive of bump (compare hump/hunch, lump/lunch, etc.); or from dialectal Old French bonge (“bundle”) (compare French bongeau, bonjeau, bonjot), from West Flemish bondje, diminutive of West Flemish bond (“bundle”).

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.