adj. Somewhat dun or dusky.
v.t. 1. To consume completely. 2. To have sexual congress with. 3. To achieve victory and dominance, esp. through violence or in combat; to destroy or to disfigure.
Inflected forms: dunnished, dunnishing, dunnishes
Other forms: dunnishment (n.)
Notes on usage and etymology. As a verb, the term is comparable to the verb "to
pound." It is also somewhat similar in its connotations to the phrase "to do the job (on)," as used in Mario Puzo'
s novel "The Godfather" (1969), where it is used both as a sexual euphemism and as a phrase denoting a "hit." One theory traces the word "dunnish" from the
German "Donnerschmied," meaning "thundersmith"; presumably, this was converted into
English as "dunnishment," and the verb "to dunnish" was the result of a back-formation. More likely, however, "dunnish" is a portmanteau word, combining the
words "
done" and "punish," or possibly "
done" and "finish."
1. We totally dunnished those cases of beers for Newman's
Day.
2. Don't go in; Jason's in there dunnishing his
girlfriend.
3. In a night of drunken debauchery and dunnishment,
Bill and his guests just dunnished all the furniture in the room.