You searched for: “hunch
haunch, hunch, hunch
haunch (HAWCH, HAHNCH) (noun)
The hip, buttock, and upper thigh in humans and animals: The farmer slapped the haunch of the horse to send it to the barn.
hunch (HUHNCH) (verb)
To bend forward in a position of crooked posture: Sitting on the tall stool, the clerk had to hunch forward to read the ledgers.
hunch (HUHNCH) (noun)
An intuitive sense regarding something that has happened or might happen: Jeb had a hunch that his sister would come for a visit during the summer.

After Justin's horse galloped away with him, he found himself hunched over the saddle which had slipped back onto the haunch of the horse. He had a hunch that he was destined for a fall and sure enough, he fell off.

Word Entries at Get Words: “hunch
hunch (s) (noun), hunches (pl)
1. An intuitive feeling about something: Jeremy had a hunch that the shabbily dressed person on the corner was trying to "humbug" him into giving the man some money.
2. A stoop or a curved posture of the body with the head down and shoulders forward: A famous person in history with a hunch was the "Hunchback of Notre Dame".
3. A large lump or slice of something: "MMM – chocolate", Marjory said as she cut herself a hunch of cake.
4. Etymology: originally (1581) a verb, "to push, to thrust", of unknown origin.

Until the rise of scientific medicine, it was generally believed that a deformed person had special links with the demonic world.

  • A gross malformation; such as, a hump or hunch in the spine was considered to be a mark of great psychic powers.
  • With special connections with the devil, a hunchback was believed to be capable of seeing into the future.
  • For centuries, accurate predictions were strongly linked with the possession of a gnarled back.
  • As a result, any premonition or flash of insight came to be known as a hunch.
—Excerpts from What's In A Word?, by Webb Garrison;
Rutledge Hill Press; Nashville, Tennessee; 2000; page 190.
A feeling that is not based on known facts.
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This entry is located in the following unit: English Words in Action, Group H (page 4)
hunch (verb), hunches; hunched; hunching
1. To bend or to draw up into a hump: Shanna hunched her shoulders as she walked against the wind.
2. To push or to shove; to thrust oneself forward: The little boy wanted to be in the front of the photograph, so he hunched himself through the group.
3. To assume a crouched or cramped posture: When the dog came into the room, the cat hunched in a corner.
This entry is located in the following unit: English Words in Action, Group H (page 4)
Pertaining to a feeling or premonition that a certain thing will take place or a curved posture of the body with the head down and shoulders leaning forward. (1)