scrunch
English
    
    Etymology
    
Attested since about 1800. Probably an intensive form of crunch; ultimately derived from the onomatopoeia of a crumpling sound; or perhaps a blend of squeeze + crunch.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /skɹʌnt͡ʃ/
- Audio (Southern England) - (file) 
- Rhymes: -ʌntʃ
Verb
    
scrunch (third-person singular simple present scrunches, present participle scrunching, simple past and past participle scrunched)
- (transitive) To crumple and squeeze to make more compact.
- He scrunched the paper into a ball and threw it at the whistling girl.
 - 1793–1799, Robert Townson, Tracts and Observations in Natural History and Physiology, page 154:- […] and the scrunching of ashes under our feet I have often observed to be disagreeable to many.
 
- 1800, Walter Besant, James Rice, With Harp and Crown, page 828:- Then I put them under my heel, and scrunched them up, every one.
 
 - (with object "one's face") To contract the muscles of one's face so as to draw their facial features together, out of pain, discomfort, uncertainty, etc.
- He scrunched his face at his wife's request.
 
 
- Alternative form of scranch
Translations
    
crumple
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See also
    
- scrunchie
- scrunch up
Translations
    
Further reading
    
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “scrunch”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
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