bunny
English
editPronunciation
edit- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /ˈbʌni/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -ʌni
- Hyphenation: bun‧ny
Etymology 1
editFrom bun (“rabbit”) + -y (diminutive suffix). Probably from Scottish Gaelic bun (“bottom, butt, stump, stub”), from Old Irish bun (“the thick end of anything, base, butt, foot”), from Proto-Celtic *bonus, though its origin is uncertain. Compare also English bum. Together with rabbit, bunny has largely displaced its former rhyme cony (see cony for more).
Noun
editbunny (plural bunnies)
- (informal, childish) A rabbit, especially a juvenile one.
- A bunny girl: a nightclub waitress who wears a costume having rabbit ears and tail.
- 1969, Doris Lessing, The Four-Gated City, Flamingo 1993 edition, page 578:
- ‘Gwen has a job as a bunny because says she's sick of sex.’
- (sports) In basketball, an easy shot (i.e., one right next to the bucket) that is missed.
- (slang, euphemistic) A menstrual pad.
- 1992, Maureen Sutton, We Didn't Know Aught, page 17:
- A local chemist remembers: My grandmother made home-made sanitary towels from a type of muslin. They were hand-knitted, washed and re-used. Other women used netting and cotton wool. Home-made towels were known as 'bunnies'.
- 2007, E. J. McNair, A British Army Nurse in the Korean War, page 177:
- Frustratingly for us, it appeared to be much less of a hassle to purchase an expensive fountain pen, than to find, let alone buy, the smallest bottle of deodorant or a packet of Bunnies (as sanitary towels were nicknamed)!
- (cricket) Synonym of rabbit (“batsman frequently dismissed by the same bowler”)
Derived terms
edit- angst bunny
- badge bunny
- barracks bunny
- beach bunny
- beans bunny
- blushing bunny
- bridge bunny
- buckle bunny
- bunnyball
- bunny-boiler
- bunny boiler
- bunny-boiling
- bunny boot
- bunny buster
- bunny chow
- bunny dip
- bunny ear cactus
- bunny ears
- bunny ears cactus
- bunny girl
- bunny grass
- bunny hill
- bunny-hop
- bunny hop
- bunny hopper
- bunnyhopping
- bunny-hug
- bunny hug
- bunny hugger
- bunny hunt
- bunnykind
- bunny mother
- bunny rabbit
- bunny ranch
- bunny rat
- bunny slope
- bunny suit
- bunny trail
- bunny wunny
- chubby bunny
- cuddle-bunny
- cuddle bunny
- dumb bunny
- Duracell bunny
- dust bunny
- Easter Bunny
- Energizer bunny
- fluff bunny
- fluffy bunny
- fuckbunny
- fuck bunny
- gym bunny
- happy bunny
- honeybunny
- honey bunny
- jungle bunny
- pink bunny
- Playboy Bunny, Playboy bunny
- plot bunny
- puck-bunny
- puck bunny
- reverse bunny suit
- rope bunny
- ski bunny
- slope bunny
- snow bunny
- snuggle-bunny
- snuggle bunny
- Stanford bunny
- sun bunny
- sun-bunny
- that's the bunny
Translations
edit
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Adjective
editbunny (comparative bunnier, superlative bunniest)
- (skiing) Easy or unchallenging.
- Let’s start on the bunny slope.
- 2014, Carey Heywood, Sawyer Says: A Companion Novel to Him and Her, →ISBN:
- We are on the bunniest of bunny hills. I've fallen no fewer than six times and I love every minute of it.
Synonyms
edit- (easy or unchallenging): nursery
Etymology 2
editFrom Middle English bony, boni (“swelling, tumor”), from Old French bugne, buigne (“swelling, lump”), from Old Frankish *bungjo (“swelling, bump”), from Proto-Germanic *bungô, *bunkô (“lump, clump, heap, crowd”). More at bunion, bunch.
Alternative forms
editNoun
editbunny (plural bunnies)
- (UK dialectal) A swelling from a blow; a bump.
- (mining) A sudden enlargement or mass of ore, as opposed to a vein or lode.
Etymology 3
editFrom Middle English bune (“hollow stalk or stem, drinking straw”), from Old English bune (“cup, beaker, drinking vessel; reed, cane”), of unknown origin. Related to English bun, boon (“the stalk of flax or hemp less the fibre”), Scots bune, boon, been, see bun, boon. Compare also bunweed.
Noun
editbunny (plural bunnies)
- (UK dialectal) A culvert or short covered drain connecting two ditches.
- (UK dialectal) A chine or gully formed by water running over the edge of a cliff; a wooded glen or small ravine opening through the cliff line to the sea.
- 1983, Geoffrey Morley, Smuggling in Hampshire and Dorset, 1700-1850, page 72:
- Friar's Cliff and Highcliffe have always been what the second name suggests: cliffs too high to scale easily and with no convenient bunnies, chines or combes.
- (UK dialectal) Any small drain or culvert.
- (UK dialectal) A brick arch or wooden bridge, covered with earth across a drawn or carriage in a water-meadow, just wide enough to allow a hay-wagon to pass over.
- (UK dialectal) A small pool of water.
Etymology 4
editNoun
editbunny (plural bunnies)
- (South Africa) Bunny chow; a snack of bread filled with curry.
- 2008, Steve Pike, Surfing South Africa, page 258:
- Surfers from Durban grew up on bunnies. You get the curry in the bread with the removed square chunk, used to dunk back in the curry.
Etymology 5
editFrom bun (“small bread roll”) + -y.
Adjective
editbunny (comparative more bunny or bunnier, superlative most bunny or bunniest)
- (rare, humorous) Resembling a bun (small bread roll). [since the 1960s, but always rare]
- 2012, Sue Simkins, Cooking With Mrs Simkins, →ISBN:
- If you would like to make some buns with more of a Chelsea bunlike texture follow the recipe above, but increase the flour to 300g (11oz). This will make them less rich and more 'bunny'.
- 2014, Bruce Montague, Wedding Bells and Chimney Sweeps, →ISBN:
- Before the interregnum, the cakes made for weddings had been pathetic offerings, consisting mainly of piles of biscuits and scones. When you read the list of ingredients -- sugar, eggs, milk, flour, currents, and spices -- these must have looked and tasted a lot like hot cross buns, but without being hot, without the cross, and without being particularly bunny.
Synonyms
edit- (resembling a bun): bunlike
- English 2-syllable words
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- Rhymes:English/ʌni
- Rhymes:English/ʌni/2 syllables
- English terms suffixed with -y (diminutive)
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