slunk
English
Etymology
From an allusive sense of slink (“to bring forth young prematurely”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /slʌŋk/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ʌŋk
Noun
slunk (plural slunks)
- An animal, especially a calf, born prematurely or abortively.
- 1962 [1959], William S. Burroughs, Naked Lunch, New York: Grove Press:
- Then I met a great guy, Placenta Juan the Afterbirth Tycoon. Made his in slunks during the war. (Slunks are underage calves trailing afterbirths and bacteria, generally in an unsanitary and unfit condition.)
- 2001, ed. Rob Cook, The Making of a Drum Company, Hal Leonard, published 2001, page 53:
- Calf heads were tanned from yearling calves less than a year in age. Slunk skins were tanned from unborn calfskins which, gruesome as it sounds, were often by products of the cow slaughtering process.
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