From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhunkhunk /hʌŋk/ noun [countable]1THICK OBJECT OR MATERIALa thick piece of something, especially food, that has been taken from a bigger piecehunk ofa hunk of bread► see thesaurus at piece2informalSEXY a sexually attractive man with a big strong bodyExamples from the Corpushunk• He turned round, offering me a hunk of bread and margarine with cheese on top - realluxury.• Jack cut off a hunk of meat and handed it to Simon.• For lunch I had cheese with a hunk of bread and a glass of redwine.• Comets are hunks of dirt and ice with elongatedorbits that take them from the outersolar system to near the sun.• Lifting the heavyhunks of metal over the chain-link fence seemed improbable and buyers of black-market bronzes are scarce.• Just pick up the nearest hunk of high-pricedtechnology you have on hand and hurl it against the wall.• The finalproject was a still life with all these objects in it as well as a small hunk of plasticham.• Her eyes lit up as she spotted Spartacus hunk Kirk-at 83 just a year her junior and pictured right.• He reached the large block of offices, at least eighty firms doing business within this hunk of concrete and glass.Originhunk(1800-1900)Flemishhunke