- (bunk) a long trough for feeding cattle
- (bunk) beat: avoid paying; "beat the subway fare"
- (bunk) berth: a bed on a ship or train; usually in tiers
- (bunk) provide with a bunk; "We bunked the children upstairs"
- (bunk) a rough bed (as at a campsite)
- (bunk) scat: flee; take to one's heels; cut and run; "If you see this man, run!"; "The burglars escaped before the police showed up"
- (bunk) unacceptable behavior (especially ludicrously false statements)
- (The bunk) William "Bunk" Moreland is a fictional character on the HBO drama The Wire, played by actor Wendell Pierce. ...
- (bunk) One of a series of berths or bed placed in tiers; A built-in bed on board ship, often erected in tiers one above the other; A cot; A wooden case or box, which serves for a seat in the daytime and for a bed at night; A piece of wood placed on a lumberman's sled to sustain the end of ...
- (Bunk) a) A crossbeam on a truck on which the logs rest. b) To place the empty trailer of a logging truck on the tractor unit's bunk for the trip back to the landing
- (7. BUNK) a drug you buy that ends up being fake. ("I bought some bunk crack, it ended up being wax.")
- (Bunk (n)) Fake drugs; usually wax or sugar.
- (Bunk) (bungk) adj. See 'dirty'.
- (Bunk) A (youth) subculture based on direct bodily satisfaction, that turns its back on all higher goals.
- (Bunk) A bed area on a boat.
- (Bunk) A berth or bed, usually built in.
- (Bunk) A sleeping place, usually higher up than a conventional bed. Often (but not always) this can be folded or removed to provide additional living space.
- (Bunk) Bad drugs (fake not real like bunk doses).
- (Bunk) Broken or no longer working; also false, untruthful.
- (Bunk) Fake cocaine; Crack Cocaine
- (Bunk) The price Glamour exacts for its power.
- (Bunk) Timber crossbars forming the bed for logs in a logging sleigh. Also the bed people slept on at night.
- (Bunk) this is again a universal term for "missing a class/lecture"
- (bunk (n)) A shelflike bed or berth built into or against the wall of a ship
- (bunk) nonsense; same as applesauce, etc. (a shortened form of bunkum, which is also spelled buncombe, from the name of a North Carolina county whose representative in Congress in 1820 explained the irrelevance of a speech he was making by saying that he was "talking to Buncombe")