| funk | A genre of popular music associated with the 1970s and typified by prominent bass guitar and horn section | en |
| funk | One who funks; a shirk; a coward | en |
| funk | A shrinking back through fear | en |
| funk | To be frightened, and shrink back; to flinch; as, to funk at the edge of a precipice | en |
| funk | To envelop with an offensive smell or smoke | en |
| funk | To funk at; to flinch at; to shrink from (a thing or person); as, to funk a task | en |
| funk | An offensive smell; a stench | en |
| funk | A state of fear or panic, especially cowardly | en |
| funk | mental depression | en |
| funk | Foul or unpleasant smell, especially body odour | en |
| funk | fear, terror (Slang); coward (Slang); type of jazz isim | en |
| funk | To emit an offensive smell; to stink | en |
| funk | To frighten; to cause to flinch | en |
| funk | Originally, jazz with a pronounced gospel influence Later, a style of R&B music or jazz-rock fusion | en |
| funk | an earthy, unsophisticated style and feeling, or the style and feelings of blues | en |
| funk | A type of popular music combining elements of jazz, blues and soul and characterized by syncopated rhythm and a heavy, repetitive bass line | en |
| funk | Funk is a style of dance music based on jazz and blues, with a strong, repeated bass part. a mixture of experimental jazz, soul and funk. to avoid doing something because it is difficult, or because you are afraid | en |
| funk | be afraid; cower in fear; frighten; escape; avoid fiil | en |
| funk | draw back, as with fear or pain; "she flinched when they showed the slaughtering of the calf" | en |
| funk | Front Uni National du Kampuchéa, or National United Front of Kampuchea Established by Sihanouk in Beijing in 1970, shortly after the Lon Nol coup ousted him from power; a political and military coalition committed to destroying the Lon Nol regime * | en |
| funk | United States biochemist (born in Poland) who showed that several diseases were caused by dietary deficiencies and who coined the term `vitamin' for the chemicals involved (1884-1967) | en |
| funk | "Radio " (German ) | en |
| funk | a state of nervous depression; "he was in a funk" | en |
| funk | A kind of popular music emerging out of the soul music of James Brown, led in the 1970's by Sly and the Family Stone and the bands of George Clinton (Parliament and Funkadelic), with a new emphasis on complex rhythms and a nimble style of bass playing (Bootsy Collins was one of main bass players of this period) Funk bands often featured full horn sections (trumpets, trombones, and saxophones), playing tight interjections | en |
| funk | If you need to ask, you'll probably never know | en |
| funks | plural of funk | en |