chungus
English
Etymology
From chunk. Compare humongous (“extremely large”, adjective) or dingus (“any object or thing; a foolish person”, noun), and chonk. Attested from the late 2010s. Resurfaced by the meme Big Chungus based from the Looney Tunes episode Wabbit Twouble.
Pronunciation
Noun
chungus (countable and uncountable, plural chunguses or chungi)
- (Internet slang) Any tangible object or thing, especially one that is short and thick.
- 2018, CG5, “Big Chungus”[1]:
- He’s a big chungus / He’s a big chunky boy / Such a big bun, yes / We are so overjoyed
- 2019 January 9, Joey Cosco, “Big Chungus”, in Digg[2]:
- Meanwhile, memes about "Chungus" have been circulating on their own subreddit for over a year, and "Big Chungus" since Fall 2018.
- 2019 October 13, HattedSandwich, “Deep Rock Galactic”, in Reddit[3]:
- Close to a hundred Magnite and 30 Hollomite in these two chunguses
- 2020 April 30, Rachel Gonzalez, “These New Pokémon Plushes Are Certified Big Chungi”, in The Gamer[4]:
- These New Pokémon Plushes Are Certified Big Chungi The Pokémon Center just released huge plush versions of Gigantamax Pikachu and Meowth, with a giant price tag to match.
- (Internet slang, humorous, attributive) A nonsense word or placeholder, often used incongruously in self-deprecating or doomer-like speech.
- (Internet slang, ironic, attributive) Something that is correct, agreeable to consensus, or without fault, as part of a straw man.
References
- “What does Chungus mean?”, in Dictionary.com, April 2019: “Chungus is a meme featuring a chunky version of the cartoon character Bugs Bunny, typically captioned Big Chungus. It began as gaming joke that spread online as a slang term for anything "(adorably) chunky," similar to chonky.”