plonks

listen to the pronunciation of plonks
English - English
plural of , plonk
third-person singular of plonk
plonk
1970s UK police slang for a female police constable

Chris and that plonk had better be flushing the scum out.

plonk
The sound made by something solid landing
plonk
The sound of something solid landing

I just heard a plonk — did something fall down in the kitchen?.

plonk
To set or toss (something) down carelessly

When you’ve finished with the sponge, just plonk it back in the sink.

plonk
(followed by a location) Precisely and forcefully

He dropped his bag of tools plonk in the middle of the table.

plonk
The supposed sound of adding a user to one's killfile
plonk
In Internet forums, to automatically ignore a particular poster; killfile

I got tired of his trolling and ad hominem attacks, so I plonked him.

plonk
Plonk is cheap or poor quality wine
plonk
In Internet forums, to automatically ignore a particular poster
plonk
Cheap or inferior everyday wine
plonk
The sound a newbie makes as he plummets to the bottom of a killfile list in a Usenet group
plonk
A plonk is a heavy, hollow sound. the dry plonk of tennis balls. Cheap or inferior wine. cheap wine
plonk
a cheap wine of inferior quality
plonk
[USENET: possibly influenced by British slang `plonk' for cheap booze] The sound a {newbie} makes as he falls to the bottom of a {kill file} Used almost exclusively in the {newsgroup} talk bizarre, this term (usually written "*plonk*") is a form of public ridicule
plonk
If you plonk yourself somewhere, you sit down carelessly without paying attention to the people around you. Steve plonked himself down on a seat and stayed motionless as the bus moved away
plonk
set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noise; "He planked the money on the table"; "He planked himself into the sofa"
plonk
{i} sound of something falling into water, splashing sound
plonk
the noise of something dropping (as into liquid)
plonk
the noise of something dropping (as into liquid) a cheap wine of inferior quality
plonk
{f} pluck a musical instrument; fall noisily into water; parachute
plonk
British term for simple, pordinary wine Often used to describe very inexpensive wine with no character
plonk
If you plonk something somewhere, you put it or drop it there heavily and carelessly. She plonked the beer on the counter
plonk
An onomatopoeia for the sound of something dropping
plonk
{i} cheap wine, inexpensive wine, sack
plonk
while producing a sound like that of water dripping
plonk
A super-cheap wine
plonk
To set or toss something down carelessly