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单词 bonk
释义

Definition of bonk in English:

bonk

(North American boink)
verbbɒŋkbɑŋk
informal
  • 1with object Hit (someone or something)

    he bonked his head on the plane's low bulkhead

    他的头“嘭”一下撞在了飞机的隔板上。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I usually don't listen until the situation foretold to me comes right up and bonks me on the nose.
    • On the first landing she attempts to stand, but one leg is an unhelpful position, and she bonks her head on the landing.
    • Keagan nodded vigorously, accidentally bonking his forehead on the other's collarbone.
    • He changed position to free up one of his hands, and then he used the hand to bonk his enemy's head.
    • Liz stood on her toes just to bonk him in the head.
    • She steps closer to him, wishing she were two feet taller so she could just bonk her fist onto his obnoxiously rectangular head.
    • If I bonk you on the head and take your wallet, I may damage my soul but I do have your money.
    • The echoing bonks as they bounced down the concrete stairs was satisfyingly loud.
    • The pebble went sailing in the air before bonking him on the head.
    • When Evan tries to mount his trusty steed, he bonks his superhero-sized chin on the saddle.
    • Don't lower yourself too quickly, or you'll bonk your head on the ground.
    • That was built at about the time William the Conqueror was bonking Anglo-Saxons on the head.
    • He stood, making sure that he wouldn't bonk his head on the ceiling.
    • Maria jumped up so quickly, Dean's head bonked the ground hard as it fell from her lap.
    • She had only walked a few steps, when in the next second, she was flying in the air before her forehead bonked into the whiteboard painfully.
    • There's simply no way a fire fell off a shelf and bonked an entire family in the head all at once.
    • He did as told, and ended up bonking her on the head as she came up.
    • During the fracas, the prince got bonked on his nose.
    • ‘Naw,’ he replied smiling fondly and bonking her on the head with his book, ‘My mom drove me today.’
    • Pierre sat bold upright so quickly that he bonked his head on the floor of the overturned boat.
  • 2British no object Have sexual intercourse.

    〈英〉交媾

    the young couple bonking upstairs
    with object I don't think that bonking the boss is a wise career strategy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • That was translated into ‘We bonked all night in the back of the Volvo.’
    • The World Health Organization estimates that for every minute that passes, 83,000 couples round the world are bonking.
    • I'll show you mine if you show me yours… that is, I'll tell you which star I'd like to sleep with if you'll tell me who you'd like to bonk.
    • But that does not mean the bike sheds are crawling with nubile adolescents bonking like bunnies, or that those highly sexually experienced teenagers are typical.
    • Unfortunately the script gods have decreed that our enigmatic hero has to have someone to bonk.
    Synonyms
    sexual intercourse, intercourse, lovemaking, making love, sex act, sexual relations, anal penetration, sexual penetration, vaginal penetration
  • 3no object (of a cyclist or runner) reach a point of exhaustion that makes it impossible to go further.

    (自行车运动员)达到极限

    I bonked and couldn't pedal another stroke
    Example sentencesExamples
    • And when you bonk, they're still on the job, drawing on other energy systems to keep you going.
    • My workouts were going more smoothly, and there was never an instance when I was in the middle of a run and all of a sudden felt the bonking effect.
    • But by the end of the three months, I could go up to 194 beats a minute and not bonk.
    • When I started the training, if I pushed myself above, say, 188 beats per minute, I would bonk.
    • A seven-mile loop on such terrain may take as long as two hours and always leaves one bruised, bloodied, and bonked.
    • A skinny man, who bonked early and often, crumples onto his back, eyes glazed over in a thousand-yard stare.
    • Start by dawn and knock off by noon here - and hydrate or bonk.
    • Little do we know that at the top of the mountain he has bonked and is lying in the first-aid station, his body limp and shivering.
    • And if you bonk on though ascents like these, the efforts taking your toll on your legs may well lessen your downhilling abilities too.
    • The new routine never leaves him feeling bonked, but that's not best part.
    • I was brought up watching the painful grimaces of bonking cyclists attempting the inane.
    • This year I threw time away in the Pyrenees when I bonked.
    • More important, if you bonk on the run or have bike problems, it is much safer to have the wind at your back for the return trip.
    • He bonked over the next ascent, losing more than a minute, and the overall leader's mantle, to The Falcon.
    • Then he starts to talk about freeriding, half pipes and barrel bonks and I'm completely lost.
    • I usually bring a wee bit of honey with me on rides in case I bonk.
    • Every year, walkers are pulled off the course for dehydration and the effects of bonking.
    • Gerosa is now letting a gap open up at the back of the break… could he be bonking?
    • Pace lines formed and dissolved as we each tried to find the right pace to make it 26 miles without bonking.
nounbɒŋkbɑŋk
informal
  • 1An act or the sound of hitting someone or something.

    give it a bonk with a hammer

    用锤子敲击。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And yet he runs off stage in tears when he gets a little bonk from a Volvic bottle?
    • However, every bonk on the head comes in crystal clear, and for this reviewer that's all that matters.
    • Do people really get amnesia from a bonk on the head?
    • That director must've had a bonk on the head or no brain at all.
    • If an actor looks like a wimp, it's not going to be believable for him to slam down the other character, but a bonk to the eyes might work instead.
    • The next thing Ayaki heard was a small bonk and an ‘ouch’ afterwards.
    • If I ever meet JJ in person, I’ll be sure to give him a good bonk on the nose.
    • He then spotted me, and he gave me a bonk on the forehead with the heel of his hand,
    • Revolutionary soldiers were either given a stick to bite or a bonk on the head so that they'd pass out.
    • Napoleon made his exit with the slam of a door and a shower of toy soldiers, one of which hit Talleyrand in the head with an audible bonk.
    • Everything we've learned in the past few years has given us a bonk on the head in terms of speaking directly to individual people.
  • 2British An act of sexual intercourse.

    〈英〉交媾

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Last year I went back to Kynance with my beloved fiancée, and we thanked my guardian angel by having a delightful bonk on a cliff.
    • A self-absorbed advertising type, gives up his Christmas airplane seat to a family man so he can stay behind for a bonk.
    • At least Sex in the City ended with a good bonk, which provided a raucous end to another lacklustre last show.
    • Unashamedly promiscuous, Slater's ambition dictates that a quick bonk can often be indispensable to an upwardly mobile career.
  • 3the bonkA level of exhaustion that makes a cyclist or runner unable to go further.

    (自行车或跑步运动员的)疲劳极限

    we had the bonk when we were saddle sore
    Example sentencesExamples
    • And sometimes, the bonks can be even more serious.
    • It also means that you need to keep the carbohydrates coming in throughout the race as the bonk will occur sooner than at sea level.
    • As the miles rack up the body starts to feel fatigued, the mind starts to not be quite as sharp, but I wasn't feeling the bonk and could have gone on for more.
    • Starting now, we're riding more, eating less and maxed out on energy bars - a combo that leaves us primed for some pretty bad bonks.
    • The bonk will only hit you once and then you will never let it happen again.
    • This additional carbohydrate fuel will prolong the time to the bonk.

Origin

1930s: imitative.

  • Bonk is an imitation of the sound of a solid object striking a hard surface. It first appeared as a verb, meaning ‘to shell’, in the First World War. The sexual sense does not seem to have been used before the mid 1970s, but has become established, perhaps because people feel it is an acceptable term that is not too rude. The link with bonkers (mid 20th century), ‘mad’, probably comes from the idea of a mad person having been ‘bonked’ on the head one too many times.

Rhymes

clonk, conk, cronk, honk, Leblanc, pétanque, plonk, tronc, zonk

Definition of bonk in US English:

bonk

verbbɑŋkbäNGk
informal
  • 1with object Knock or hit (something) so as to cause a reverberating sound.

    敲;撞击(并发出巨响)

    he bonked his head on the plane's low bulkhead

    他的头“嘭”一下撞在了飞机的隔板上。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Pierre sat bold upright so quickly that he bonked his head on the floor of the overturned boat.
    • That was built at about the time William the Conqueror was bonking Anglo-Saxons on the head.
    • She steps closer to him, wishing she were two feet taller so she could just bonk her fist onto his obnoxiously rectangular head.
    • She had only walked a few steps, when in the next second, she was flying in the air before her forehead bonked into the whiteboard painfully.
    • He did as told, and ended up bonking her on the head as she came up.
    • Keagan nodded vigorously, accidentally bonking his forehead on the other's collarbone.
    • Maria jumped up so quickly, Dean's head bonked the ground hard as it fell from her lap.
    • There's simply no way a fire fell off a shelf and bonked an entire family in the head all at once.
    • Liz stood on her toes just to bonk him in the head.
    • On the first landing she attempts to stand, but one leg is an unhelpful position, and she bonks her head on the landing.
    • I usually don't listen until the situation foretold to me comes right up and bonks me on the nose.
    • ‘Naw,’ he replied smiling fondly and bonking her on the head with his book, ‘My mom drove me today.’
    • During the fracas, the prince got bonked on his nose.
    • He changed position to free up one of his hands, and then he used the hand to bonk his enemy's head.
    • The pebble went sailing in the air before bonking him on the head.
    • Don't lower yourself too quickly, or you'll bonk your head on the ground.
    • If I bonk you on the head and take your wallet, I may damage my soul but I do have your money.
    • He stood, making sure that he wouldn't bonk his head on the ceiling.
    • When Evan tries to mount his trusty steed, he bonks his superhero-sized chin on the saddle.
    • The echoing bonks as they bounced down the concrete stairs was satisfyingly loud.
  • 2British no object Have sexual intercourse with (someone).

    〈英〉交媾

    Example sentencesExamples
    • That was translated into ‘We bonked all night in the back of the Volvo.’
    • The World Health Organization estimates that for every minute that passes, 83,000 couples round the world are bonking.
    • Unfortunately the script gods have decreed that our enigmatic hero has to have someone to bonk.
    • But that does not mean the bike sheds are crawling with nubile adolescents bonking like bunnies, or that those highly sexually experienced teenagers are typical.
    • I'll show you mine if you show me yours… that is, I'll tell you which star I'd like to sleep with if you'll tell me who you'd like to bonk.
    Synonyms
    sexual intercourse, intercourse, lovemaking, making love, sex act, sexual relations, anal penetration, sexual penetration, vaginal penetration
  • 3no object (of a cyclist or runner) reach a point of exhaustion that makes one unable to go further.

    (自行车运动员)达到极限

    I bonked and couldn't pedal another stroke
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The new routine never leaves him feeling bonked, but that's not best part.
    • And when you bonk, they're still on the job, drawing on other energy systems to keep you going.
    • Start by dawn and knock off by noon here - and hydrate or bonk.
    • I usually bring a wee bit of honey with me on rides in case I bonk.
    • My workouts were going more smoothly, and there was never an instance when I was in the middle of a run and all of a sudden felt the bonking effect.
    • When I started the training, if I pushed myself above, say, 188 beats per minute, I would bonk.
    • And if you bonk on though ascents like these, the efforts taking your toll on your legs may well lessen your downhilling abilities too.
    • Gerosa is now letting a gap open up at the back of the break… could he be bonking?
    • Pace lines formed and dissolved as we each tried to find the right pace to make it 26 miles without bonking.
    • Little do we know that at the top of the mountain he has bonked and is lying in the first-aid station, his body limp and shivering.
    • I was brought up watching the painful grimaces of bonking cyclists attempting the inane.
    • Every year, walkers are pulled off the course for dehydration and the effects of bonking.
    • More important, if you bonk on the run or have bike problems, it is much safer to have the wind at your back for the return trip.
    • Then he starts to talk about freeriding, half pipes and barrel bonks and I'm completely lost.
    • But by the end of the three months, I could go up to 194 beats a minute and not bonk.
    • A skinny man, who bonked early and often, crumples onto his back, eyes glazed over in a thousand-yard stare.
    • He bonked over the next ascent, losing more than a minute, and the overall leader's mantle, to The Falcon.
    • This year I threw time away in the Pyrenees when I bonked.
    • A seven-mile loop on such terrain may take as long as two hours and always leaves one bruised, bloodied, and bonked.
nounbɑŋkbäNGk
informal
  • 1An act of knocking or hitting something that causes a reverberating sound.

    敲;撞击(并发出巨响)

    give it a bonk with a hammer

    用锤子敲击。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • However, every bonk on the head comes in crystal clear, and for this reviewer that's all that matters.
    • And yet he runs off stage in tears when he gets a little bonk from a Volvic bottle?
    • Napoleon made his exit with the slam of a door and a shower of toy soldiers, one of which hit Talleyrand in the head with an audible bonk.
    • Do people really get amnesia from a bonk on the head?
    • Revolutionary soldiers were either given a stick to bite or a bonk on the head so that they'd pass out.
    • That director must've had a bonk on the head or no brain at all.
    • He then spotted me, and he gave me a bonk on the forehead with the heel of his hand,
    • If I ever meet JJ in person, I’ll be sure to give him a good bonk on the nose.
    • If an actor looks like a wimp, it's not going to be believable for him to slam down the other character, but a bonk to the eyes might work instead.
    • The next thing Ayaki heard was a small bonk and an ‘ouch’ afterwards.
    • Everything we've learned in the past few years has given us a bonk on the head in terms of speaking directly to individual people.
  • 2British An act of sexual intercourse.

    〈英〉交媾

    Example sentencesExamples
    • At least Sex in the City ended with a good bonk, which provided a raucous end to another lacklustre last show.
    • Last year I went back to Kynance with my beloved fiancée, and we thanked my guardian angel by having a delightful bonk on a cliff.
    • A self-absorbed advertising type, gives up his Christmas airplane seat to a family man so he can stay behind for a bonk.
    • Unashamedly promiscuous, Slater's ambition dictates that a quick bonk can often be indispensable to an upwardly mobile career.
  • 3the bonkA level of exhaustion that makes a cyclist or runner unable to go further.

    (自行车或跑步运动员的)疲劳极限

    we had the bonk when we were saddle sore
    Example sentencesExamples
    • And sometimes, the bonks can be even more serious.
    • This additional carbohydrate fuel will prolong the time to the bonk.
    • The bonk will only hit you once and then you will never let it happen again.
    • As the miles rack up the body starts to feel fatigued, the mind starts to not be quite as sharp, but I wasn't feeling the bonk and could have gone on for more.
    • Starting now, we're riding more, eating less and maxed out on energy bars - a combo that leaves us primed for some pretty bad bonks.
    • It also means that you need to keep the carbohydrates coming in throughout the race as the bonk will occur sooner than at sea level.

Origin

1930s: imitative.

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