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Definition of hunch verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

hunch

verb
 
/hʌntʃ/
 
/hʌntʃ/
[intransitive, transitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they hunch
 
/hʌntʃ/
 
/hʌntʃ/
he / she / it hunches
 
/ˈhʌntʃɪz/
 
/ˈhʌntʃɪz/
past simple hunched
 
/hʌntʃt/
 
/hʌntʃt/
past participle hunched
 
/hʌntʃt/
 
/hʌntʃt/
-ing form hunching
 
/ˈhʌntʃɪŋ/
 
/ˈhʌntʃɪŋ/
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  1. to bend the top part of your body forward and raise your shoulders and back
    • (+ adv./prep.) She leaned forward, hunching over the desk.
    • hunch something He hunched his shoulders and thrust his hands deep into his pockets.
    Extra Examples
    • He hunched over the map.
    • He hunched up his shoulders.
    • She hunched forward to see the picture.
    • She sat hunched on the bed all day.
    Topics Appearancec2
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryHunch is used with these nouns as the object:
    • back
    • shoulder
    See full entry
    Word Originlate 15th cent.: of unknown origin. The original meaning was ‘push, shove’ (noun and verb), a sense retained now in Scots as a noun, and in US dialect as a verb. This sense of the noun probably derives from a US sense of the verb ‘nudge someone in order to draw attention to something’.
See hunch in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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