[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.

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1803.  Ann. Reg., 802. Six feet junked off the smaller part of the root … will yield several gallons of water.

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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.

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1847.  R. Hill, in Gosse, Birds Jamaica, 392. They trod and stirred the mashed biscuits and junked fish, with which we fed them.

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