[
UK
/bˈʌntʃ/
]
[ US /ˈbəntʃ/ ]
[ US /ˈbəntʃ/ ]
VERB
-
form into a bunch
The frightened children bunched together in the corner of the classroom -
gather or cause to gather into a cluster
She bunched her fingers into a fist
NOUN
-
a grouping of a number of similar things
a bunch of trees
a cluster of admirers -
an informal body of friends
he still hangs out with the same crowd -
any collection in its entirety
she bought the whole caboodle
How To Use bunch In A Sentence
- He looked a bit worried when I sat down at the table and produced a bunch of inhalers, some pills, a bottle of cough syrup and some throat lozenges and proceeded to stuff them all into my mouth…
- I've been bushwhacked with a bunch of stuff that's keeping me away from the keyboard!
- It nearly brought a tear to my eye when I saw thousands of screaming fans watching a bunch of (and I use the term affectionately) nerds out there doing their thing. Sun Bloggers
- Rohitha bought several bunches of bananas and all the papaya fruits on display, while Pala bought a packet each of the green gram, sesame and ranawara.
- We're sitting in the middle of a gay pub, and - typically for a bunch of straight guys, I muse - they haven't twigged at all.
- Oh dear ... our gal SUZANNE has her fetus-fetishist panties in the bunchiest of bunches. I’ll take “Divorced From Reality” for $500, Alex.
- With the exception of one guy, whose name escapes me right now, the DJs are a pretty poor bunch too.
- You got a big hefty looking bloke who looked like he could handle himself in a barney, put him and a bunch of like mates out on the streets at all hours of the day and night as a visible presence.
- The Kennedy partisans are quite a tongue-tied bunch, all of them struggling gamely, if inarticulately, to somehow dismiss or disdain or circumlocute what is, apparently, the main focus of the film. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
- I crossed a railroad overpass and reached a bunch of shacks where two highways forked off, both for Denver.