The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bung \Bung\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Bunged; p. pr. & vb. n. Bunging.] To stop, as the orifice in the bilge of a cask, with a bung; to close; -- with up.
To bung up, to use up, as by bruising or over exertion; to exhaust or incapacitate for action. [Low]
He had bunged up his mouth that he should not have
spoken these three years.
--Shelton
(Trans. Don
Quixote).
Usage examples of "bunged".
What do you call it when two people of opposite sexes are bunged together in close association in a secluded spot, meeting each other every day and seeing a lot of each other?
It was what the magistrate had said to me on the occasion when I stood in the dock as Eustace Plimsoll, of The Laburnums: and as it had impressed me a good deal at the time, I just bunged it in now by way of giving the conversation a tone.
The next moment she was legging it for the dining-room, while I, having bunged the bicycle into a bush, made for the stairs.
She entered a print command and documents were generated, none of which I was able to sign with my bunged-up right hand.
My medical insurance would cover the expenses incurred in behalf of my bunged-up hand.
Given the condition of my bunged up fingers, I doubted I'd be capable of pulling the trigger in any event, but the gun was a comfort in my current apprehensive state.
After I'd bunged her, she admitted they'd been there several times before.
I bought my mum a peacock carpet for a fiver, with a pair of flip-flops bunged in.
Eric, the hereditary heir to the Lambton Lairdee, his extremely great great-grandfather having slain the famous Worm and been bunged the title in perpetuity by the king.
I checked the display to make sure the power supply was on and I was still on channel one, then bunged the Sony back inside my jacket.
Sweat poured down his face as he leaned forward, nervously pushed a tablet through the foil and bunged it down his neck, then fought with the Evian bottle top.