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The guy might be a frog, or maybe a bohunk. '
Talked a little like a bohunk.
The American grinned: "Sure, I can talk bohunk.
("A smart Jew" and "a dumb bohunk" were expressions I often heard.)
"Bohunk," he said.
They were more often called Austrians than Slays and lived in neighborhoods called Bohunk Towns.
Epithets such as "No-name-ovich" and "Bohunk" were used in identifying the Yugoslavs.
I won't take a back seat to that Bohunk, Chairmock, Chermack or whatever his name is.
The one that got on my case the most was Howie Plotsky, a big dumb bohunk with zits all over his face.
What was the date of the squassation of the Bohunk of Planet Tee- total, in local zero-meridian time?
"You can donate the railroad ticket to some bohunk just off the immigrant boat at Castle Garden," the younger man said with a wave of the cigar.
Honky may also be a variant of hunky, which was a deviation of Bohunk, a slur for Bohemian-Hungarian immigrants in the early 1900s.
Lennon's somewhat un-PC lyrics contain the London slang term "bohunk", a mildly derogatory word for an immigrant of Bohemian descent.
The term Hunky or Bohunk can be applied to various Slavic and Hungarian immigrants who moved to America from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
At another point, he said: "So everybody who says, 'Polls all show that Dole should not go negative, the American people, women, they don't want to hear this stuff' - it's bohunk!
It was adapted from the short story "Jan Volkanik" by Judge Michael A. Musmanno and the play Bohunk by Harry R. Irving.
The assignments usually lead them into far-off and exotic locales such as the Moon, Mount Olympus, the center of the Earth or the mutant inhabited waters of Bohunk Lagoon.
There was a drunken howl from the back seat, and Sandy Foster, football bohunk extraordinaire, leaned forward and handed them both cold beers, after throwing his own empty through the open T-top.
When my great-grandfather got to the Iron Range about a hundred years ago, the mine's Bohunk pay-clerk heard 'Myllyharju' and said right then and there: 'From now on, your name is Havel!!"
But if they do, they tend to sound like Burt Carroll of Constance Beresford-Howe's "Book of Eve," upbraiding his wife after she takes up with a Hungarian immigrant in a poor section of Montreal: "A bohunk workman in your bed.
The concept for Black Fury was adapted from the short story "Jan Volkanik" by Musmanno and the play Bohunk by Harry R. Irving, based on an actual 1929 incident in which John Barkoski, a striking coal miner, was beaten to death by company detectives.