"to squat, crouch," 1720, Scottish, of uncertain origin, possibly from a Scandinavian source, cf. Old Norse huka "to crouch," hoka, hokra "to crawl." Hunker down, Southern U.S. dialectal phrase, popularized c.1965, from northern British hunker "haunch." Related: Hunkered; hunkering.
from the Online Etymology Dictionary
During the storm, the family decided to hunker down in their basement until it passed.
The cast of De hunkering - 1997 includes: Theo van Gogh as himself
Hunkering down at his computer, Carl turned on his nerd-mode and set to work, determine to make "nerd-mode" a culturally acceptable phrase.
Fear of vertigo or feeling dizzy when looking down.
The etymology of etymology is from the greek etumologia which means "true sense of a word"
Etymology is the opposite of Antipodes
what is the etymology of clement
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
The etymology of art is the history of art
No. Etymology deals with the study of words and Biology deals with the study of Life. Both do deal with the origin of something. Etymologists break down words to study their origins and Biologists study the origins of life.
No, the word 'hunkered' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to hunker'; to squat or crouch down low. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (the hunkered soldiers).The noun form is hunkers (a synonym for haunches) and the gerund, hunkering.