[f. JUNK sb.2] trans. a. To cut off in a lump; b. To cut or divide into junks or chunks. Hence Junked ppl. a., chopped in pieces.
1803. Ann. Reg., 802. Six feet junked off the smaller part of the root will yield several gallons of water.
1833. M. Scott, Tom Cringle, ii. (1859), 42. To produce a two-inch rope and junk it into three lengths was the work of an instant.
1847. R. Hill, in Gosse, Birds Jamaica, 392. They trod and stirred the mashed biscuits and junked fish, with which we fed them.