hench
See also: Hench
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /hɛnt͡ʃ/
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -ɛntʃ
Etymology 1
Variant of haunch.
Noun
hench (plural henches)
- (architecture) The narrow side of chimney stack, a haunch.
- (architecture) The side of an arch from the topmost part (crown) to the bottommost part (impost).
- (Scotland) A limp; lameness.
Verb
hench (third-person singular simple present henches, present participle henching, simple past and past participle henched)
Etymology 2
Clipping of henchman.
Verb
hench (third-person singular simple present henches, present participle henching, simple past and past participle henched)
- (comics) To be a henchman or henchwoman, usually for a supervillain.
- 2010 May 3, Jon Colton Barry, Piero Piluso, “The Beak”, in Phineas and Ferb, season 2, episode 27:
- Candace Flynn (Ashley Tisdale): I told you! You're my henchman. Hench or something. / Stacy Hirano (Kelly Hu): Oh, no. You did not just tell me to hench.
Adjective
hench (comparative hencher, superlative henchest)
- (UK, slang, MLE) Big, strong, and muscular.
- He's well hench.
- That's a seriously hench doorman.
- 2016 December 9, Adam Boult, quoting Elijah Quashie, “These brilliant videos about London's takeaway chicken shops are a YouTube hit”, in The Daily Telegraph[1]:
- It caught me off guard because it was hench. My mind was like, ‘right, this burger’s hench’. I looked at it, right, ‘that look peng’, and it hit me two thirds of the way in, I clocked that the burger was not peng at all, it was just hench.
Synonyms
- (muscular): buff, enormous, swoll; see also Thesaurus:strapping or Thesaurus:large