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- Dictionaryhunch/hʌn(t)ʃ/
verb
- 1. raise (one's shoulders) and bend the top of one's body forward: "Eliot hunched his shoulders against a gust of snow" Similar Opposite
noun
- 1. a feeling or guess based on intuition rather than fact: "I have a hunch that someone is telling lies" Similar
- 2. a humped position or thing: "the hunch of his back" Similar
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Learn the meaning of hunch as a noun and a verb, with examples of usage and related words. Hunch can refer to an intuitive idea or a bent posture.
- English (US)
HUNCH meaning: 1. an idea that is based on feeling and for...
- Znaczenie Hunch, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
HUNCH definicja: 1. an idea that is based on feeling and for...
- Hunch Turkish Translation
HUNCH translate: önsezi, sezgi, içe doğuş, kamburunu...
- Hunch: Thai Translation
HUNCH translate: ลางสังหรณ์. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Hunch: Japanese Translation
HUNCH translate: 勘(かん), 丸(まる)くなる. Learn more in the...
- Hunch: Russian Translation
HUNCH translate: предчувствие, чутье , горбиться, сутулиться...
- Hunch: German Translation
HUNCH translate: die Ahnung. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Hunch: French Translation
hunch translate: pressentiment [masculine], intuition...
- English (US)
Learn the meaning of hunch as a verb and a noun, with synonyms, examples, and word history. Hunch can mean to push roughly, to bend or curl, or to have a strong intuition.
HUNCH meaning: 1. an idea that is based on feeling and for which there is no proof: 2. to lean forward with your…. Learn more.
Hunch definition: to thrust out or up in a hump; arch. See examples of HUNCH used in a sentence.
Hunch can mean an intuitive feeling or a premonition, a hump or a lump, or a bent posture. Learn how to use hunch in different contexts and see synonyms, translations and related words.
When you have a hunch about something, you think it might be true. Your dog bolts over the fence, and you have a hunch he's heading for the neighbor who feeds him pâté. Hunch is an odd word of unknown origin, which seems to have originally meant "to push or shove" — to nudge.
Learn the meaning of hunch as a noun and a verb, with synonyms and example sentences. Find out how to use hunch in British and American English, and how it differs from hunchback.