Wiktionary
a. (abbreviation of unknown English)
Usage examples of "unk.".
He was hoping to get the message to one person in particular, to his best friend — to Unk. He was looking for Unk.
One of the real commanders was dead, having been strangled at the stake by Unk. The strangled man had been Private Stony Stevenson, f ormer real commander of a British attack unit.
He sauntered over to Unk, stood inches away from him, looked him up and down.
Seven times, Unk! You know how many times they usually have to send a man to have his memory cleaned out?
He heard what an eightball you were, Unk, so he came over to your barrack to have a look at you.
After a while, you got to trust him, Unk, and you told him some of your secret theories about what life on Mars was all about.
Stony wondered who he could talk to about this, and there just wasn't anybody but you, Unk. So Stony staggered out of bed about an hour before sunrise, and he sneaked in your barrack, Unk, and he woke you up.
My name is Unk. I am going to find some way for you, me, the boy, and my best friend to escape from here.
He was lying on his bunk across the cabin from Unk. Boaz had not slept a wink.
His broad, brown, slab-muscled back amazed Unk. Living apart from Boaz, Unk had flattered himself into thinking he was a physical match for Boaz.
No one ever called him Clyde, except sometimes his nephew, Anton Camper, called him Uncle Clyde, although he mostly called him Unk. And Tony, Packer reminded himself, was a worthless piece - always involved in some fancy scheme, always talking big, but without much to show for it.
Cutler made Mayweather go next and he came up with an alien named Unk. After two loud rolls, Unk came up weak with only three bolts, but smart with eight bolts.
All he wanted was something big and strong to lift things, so the unks could lie down and sleep.
That's unusual, for an unk. The chance of any one p-card coming up in a person's lifetime is so microscopically small, so utterly worthless—"