: any of various common omnivorous black-and-white New World mammals (family Mephitidae, especially genus Mephitis) related to weasels that have a pair of perineal glands from which a secretion of pungent and offensive odor is ejected
Noun
Her brother's a low-down, dirty skunk.
he's nothing but a dirty, rotten skunkVerb
we ended up skunking them, as our goalie was able to prevent the other team from scoring a single goal
our football team consistently skunks our traditional rivals Thanksgiving after Thanksgiving
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Noun
In Wyoming, the National Park Service said rabies is most commonly found in bats and skunks.—Thao Nguyen, USA Today, 18 Aug. 2025 So are the deer, turkeys, skunks, crickets, spiders, ticks, bats, dragonflies, and ospreys.—Eric Lach, New Yorker, 18 Aug. 2025
Verb
That skunking, hot-cheeked anticipation of your body turning on you.—Essence, 22 July 2025 Long-term, however, the S&P 500 has skunked the world index, and shows very sign of continuing to do so.—Larry Light, Forbes.com, 9 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for skunk
Word History
Etymology
Noun
earlier squuncke, from a Massachusett reflex of Algonquian *šeka·kwa, from šek- urinate + -a·kw fox, fox-like animal
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