by Analogue_Microwave December 01, 2021
1. I word used as a place holder for another word that you are contractually not allowed to say to another.
2. A place holder for a word referring to a pair of homosexuals/ possible homosexuals.
2. A place holder for a word referring to a pair of homosexuals/ possible homosexuals.
1. Guy 1: you know Ethan is looking like a wonk
Guy 2: you mean a picrew character?
2. Guy 1: *sees two men* *wispers* these two were a little too straight so I added a bit of ✨wonk✨
The two men: *start making out*
Guy 1: magical
Guy 2: you mean a picrew character?
2. Guy 1: *sees two men* *wispers* these two were a little too straight so I added a bit of ✨wonk✨
The two men: *start making out*
Guy 1: magical
by Confused Conundrum October 10, 2021
by SM2187 March 07, 2023
by M North May 20, 2021
by iiiggg1 November 27, 2014
The word was used - strictly as a verb - at Harvard in the 1950s, to mean "hunker down for some serious studying," as in "I can't go out tonight. I have to wonk for my chem exam." The folk etymology was that it was KNOW spelled backwards, though how that led to the new meaning was cloudy at best. Though I never encountered it as a noun, I suppose people who did it could have been called wonkers.
by AlumAnon December 31, 2016
The term for a communication with a heavy "Woke" opinion expressed excessively, to inflate the creator's own opinion of themselves and their contribution. Derived from a mix of "Woke" and "Wank", indicating a creation that gets the creator off when they recall it.
1) That article was a poorly hidden wonk piece
2) That wonker clearly just wanted to rant and use the source material as an excuse to write it. Bet his ego inflated 10 times
2) That wonker clearly just wanted to rant and use the source material as an excuse to write it. Bet his ego inflated 10 times
by Purple Squishy April 06, 2023