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Discover LudwigThe phrase "bunk about" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is an informal phrase that means nonsense or untrue information. Example: I've heard all sorts of bunk about the new restaurant, but I won't believe it until I try it for myself.
Exact(10)
"But there's no bunk about Jimmy".
Of course no fashion photographer ever believed that bunk about photography and reality anyway.
Favourite quote: Bunk about Lester Freamon (unscripted addition from Wendell Pierce): "Look at that bow-legged mother-fucker.
Inside the cabin there was a table and a backless chair and a plank bunk about twenty inches wide.
Touring Germany in 1936 to look at Old Masters, he was unmoved by what he called, in a letter, "all the usual sentimental bunk about the Nazi persecutions".
Besides, Mr Davis can claim that he saved the day in California, while Mr Bush's "national energy crisis" (which, incidentally, is no less fictitious than Mr Davis's bunk about deregulation) is far from being solved.
Similar(50)
They bunked about 12 to a cabin, older players mixed in with younger ones to guide the freshman boys through the intense experience of football camp.
They were putting clothing in bags because the drawers of the bureau were broken, and the boys' well-worn bunk beds were about to give out.
That night, I climbed into my bunk thinking about the fishermen we had pursued.
The chaperone they had engaged, a Mrs Moylett, had done a last-minute bunk – something about a sudden engagement to an older man.
One night, word having spread of this Englishman taking pictures with an old camera, he found four policemen at the door of his bunk asking about the work.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com