1. slunk - Noun
2. slunk - Verb
Derived from slink
imp. & p. p. of Slink.
of Slink
Source: Webster's dictionaryMadness slunk in through a chink in History. It only took a moment. Arundhati Roy
Sleep slunk up like a black panther and sank its kindly fangs into what remained of the Mortdecai brain. Kyril Bonfiglioli
Oil-laden waves crashed on the shore, and greasy residue settled on coral reefs and slunk into the mangrove forests that clutch the eastern coast of the island. Source: Internet
That appears to be the philosophy, also, of the liquor industry which, after some threatening noises about a similar challenge to the ban on alcohol sales, has similarly slunk off. Source: Internet