dunker
See also: Dunker
English
Etymology
From dunk + -er (agent noun suffix) or + -er (patient suffix).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ʌŋkə(ɹ)
Noun
dunker (plural dunkers)
- Someone who dunks.
- (basketball) A person tasked with performing or training others in slam dunks.
- A biscuit that is suitable for dunking in a cup of tea.
- Any snack food suitable for dunking in sauce.
- (nautical) A kind of sonobuoy.
- 1986, Jane's Defence Weekly, volume 6, page 1285:
- Active sonar, for aircraft purposes still largely associated with dunking, suffers less variability but often has less range. […] Development of both dunkers and sonobuoys continues towards lower frequencies, implying bigger arrays, and deeper deployments.
- 2013, Philip Kaplan, Naval Air: Celebrating a Century of Naval Flying, page 179:
- Then they drop the dunker into the water and spin it around a few times so you end up upside-down.
Anagrams
Middle Low German
Etymology
From Old Saxon dunkar, from Proto-Germanic *dunkaraz, *dunkalaz (“dark”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dʊŋkər/
Adjective
dunker (comparative dunkerer, superlative dunkerest)
Declension
| singular | plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | neuter | feminine | ||
| Strong declension | ||||
| nominative | dunker | dunkere | ||
| accusative | dunkeren | dunker | dunkere | |
| dative | dunkerem(e) (dunkerennote) | dunkerer(e) | dunkeren | |
| genitive | dunkeres | dunkerer(e) | ||
| Weak declension | ||||
| nominative | dunkere | dunkeren | ||
| accusative | dunkeren | dunkere | dunkeren | |
| dative | dunkeren | |||
| genitive | ||||
The longer forms become rarer in the course of the period.