A relic of the large U.S. presence in Japan in the years following World War II, the word honcho comes from the Japanese word hanchō meaning “leader of the squad, section, group.” We are uncertain of the exact route by which honcho found its way into American military argot in the mid-1950s, though it is known that the Japanese applied hanchō to British or Australian officers in charge of work parties in prisoner-of-war camps. By the 1960s, the word had become part of colloquial American jargon.
the office was all abuzz because some honchos from corporate headquarters were coming for a visit
he's definitely the head honcho in that company
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And don’t forget the films that were to be headed up by Marvel honcho Kevin Feige, Taiki Waititi and James Mangold, among others.—Brian Truitt, USA Today, 25 May 2026 The creation of Jason Odio and chef Michael Beltran of Ariete and former Opium Group honcho Roman Jones, the bar opened in 2016, quickly evolving into a Brickell hangout.—Connie Ogle
may 20, Miami Herald, 20 May 2026 The fate of Runway now in the hands of Elias Clark scion Jay and his team of cutthroat management consultants, Andy, seeking a lifeline, reaches out to Dior honcho Emily and her bizarre tech billionaire biohacker boyfriend Benji Barnes (Justin Theroux).—Katie Walsh, Boston Herald, 30 Apr. 2026 But now that Donovan has taken himself out of the picture, what will the next Bulls honcho be looking for in a new coach?—Paul Sullivan, Chicago Tribune, 21 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for honcho
Word History
Etymology
Japanese hanchō squad leader, from han squad + chō head, chief