Chunter vs Chunker - What's the difference?
chunter | chunker |
(British, dialect) To speak in a soft, indistinct manner, mutter.
* 2003 , J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix , page 349:
(British, dialect) To grumble, complain.
* 1921 [1999], David Herbert Lawrence, Sea and Sardinia (Penguins Classics),
An obese or overweight person
* 2009 , Catherine Deveny, Free to a Good Home , page 193
* 2011 , Bil Wright, Putting Makeup on the Fat Boy , page 37
As a verb chunter
is (british|dialect) to speak in a soft, indistinct manner, mutter.As a noun chunker is
an obese or overweight person.chunter
English
Verb
(en verb)- Ron continued to chunter under his breath all the way down the street.
page 74:
- “Since she had another seat and was quite comfortable, we smiled and let her chunter .”
References
* “D. H. Lawrence gave a new lease on life to the verb to chunter'', ‘to mutter, complain’, labelled “''Obs.'' exc. ''dial''”, when he used it in ''Sea and Sardinia'' (1921)’,” ''Languages in Contact and Contrast: Essays in Contact Linguistics , by Vladimir Ivir, Damir Kalogjera, page 411 (b.g.c link)
chunker
English
Noun
(en noun)- I love fat people. Chubby-chasing is my hobby. I enjoy nothing more than waving a vanilla slice under some chunker' s nose, tying it to my bumper bar with a string of jelly snakes then driving round the block at gelati-van pace
- Double-breasted on a chunker can sometimes be a really sad look, but on me this thing is L'uomo Vogue!