HUNKER DOWN Defined

From the World Wide Words site:
"[Q] From W Walker: “When Hurricane Floyd was threatening the American east coast, every weatherman seemed to use the phrase hunker down. Do you have any idea where this word and phrase came from?”
[A] It sounds like the most typically American of phrases, but it seems originally to have been Scots, first recorded in the eighteenth century.
Nobody seems to know exactly what its origin is, though it has been suggested it’s linked to the Old Norse huka, to squat; that would make it a close cousin of old Dutch huiken and modern German hocken, meaning to squat or crouch, which makes sense. That’s certainly what’s meant by the word in American English, in phrases like hunker down or on your hunkers.
The Oxford English Dictionary has a fine description of how to hunker: “squat, with the haunches, knees, and ankles acutely bent, so as to bring the hams near the heels, and throw the whole weight upon the fore part of the feet”. The advantage of this position is that you’re not only crouched close to the ground, so presenting a small target for whatever the universe chooses to throw at you, but you’re also ready to move at a moment’s notice.
Hunker down has also taken on the sense of to hide, hide out, or take shelter, whatever position you choose to do it in. This was a south-western US dialect form that was popularised by President Johnson in the mid 1960s. Despite its Scots ancestry, hunker is rare in standard British English."

It's all so interesting. The wind is picking up and we are "hunkering down" here. Ike has now been compared to a figure skater and a hockey player by the meteorologists...which is a little humorous. I have declared a drinking game in which you take a drink whenever someone on the news says HUNKER DOWN! Sounds good to me...

Comments

Neven said…
OMG! at the hurricane party all the southern american girls were saying "hunker down" while out UK expate other halfs (which most are scottish) had no idea what we were saying!

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