dunt

See also: dun't

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English dunt, dynt, from Old English dynt (dint, blow, strike, stroke, bruise, stripe, thud, the mark or noise of a blow, a bruise, noise, crash), from Proto-West Germanic *dunti, from Proto-Germanic *duntiz (shock, blow), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰen- (to beat, push). Cognate with Swedish dialectal dunt (stroke). Doublet of dent and dint.

Noun

dunt (plural dunts)

  1. (Scotland) A stroke; a dull-sounding blow.
    • 2022, Liam McIlvanney, The Heretic, page 274:
      He was alive to every creak andd dunt, the thinness of the walls, as if the tenement block was a kind of aural panopticon that funnelled every sound to the other residents, let everyone eavesdrop on their business.

Verb

dunt (third-person singular simple present dunts, present participle dunting, simple past and past participle dunted)

  1. (Scotland) To strike; give a blow to; knock.
    • 1902, John Buchan, The Outgoing of the Tide:
      Syne he was the king of France, and fought hard with a whin bush till he had banged it to pieces. After that nothing would content him but he must be a bogle, for he found his head dunting on the stars and his legs were knocking the hills together.

Noun

dunt (uncountable)

  1. (UK, dialect) The disease gid or sturdy in sheep.

Alternative forms

Contraction

dunt

  1. (Yorkshire) Pronunciation spelling of don't.

References

  • OED 2nd edition 1989

Dutch

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Verb

dunt

  1. inflection of dunnen:
    1. second/third-person singular present indicative
    2. (archaic) plural imperative

Norwegian Nynorsk

Verb

dunt

  1. past participle of dynja

Old French

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *de unde, from Latin + unde.

Preposition

dunt

  1. of; of which; of whom
    • c. 1150, Thomas d'Angleterre, Le Roman de Tristan, page 94 (of the Champion Classiques edition, →ISBN), line 853:
      mais de l'el dunt vos oi parler
      but of the thing I hear you speak of

Usage notes

  • Like French dont, may be translated by of whom when it refers to a person and of which when it does not.

Descendants

  • Middle French: dont
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