Yes. 'Hunky' (or 'hunkie') is a disparging reference to certain immagrants from Hungary, Poland and the Carpathians. Most of them ended up working in foundries and steel mills in Western Pennsylvania and other areas of Eastern US 'coal country.' They were seen as exotic, 'ethnic,' inscrutable, superstitious, and were 'othered' by Anglo-Saxon and Germanic Americans as early as the 1870s.
Hunky Dory was created in 1971-04.
Hunky Shaw died on 1969-07-03.
Hunky Shaw was born on 1884-09-29.
You could say, "Everything at work is going hunky dory since we implemented the new project management system."
hunky
Hunky Shaw died July 3, 1969, in Yakima, WA, USA.
Hunky Shaw was born September 29, 1884, in Yakima, WA, USA.
no there is not. but the guy who owns hunky dorys has a herd of buffalo and sells buffalo burgers
For G there are: great, good, gargantuan, ginormous, gentle, giant, and gigantic. For H there are: happy, honorary, hunky, hilarious, hairy, hopeful, and hunky-dory. ^hunky-dory is my favorite.
The hunky pinky rhyme for "primary locomotive" is "engine in motion." Hunky pinky rhymes involve replacing each word with a rhyming phrase that has the same number of syllables. In this case, "engine" rhymes with "primary," and "in motion" rhymes with "locomotive."
All signs point to yes.
1866 American English.