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View definitions for bunker

bunker

noun as in underground shelter

Strong match

noun as in hazard on a golf course

Strongest match

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Example Sentences

They’d given up on the greater good and retreated to their own bunkers, leaving the rest of us to burn.

For example, advanced bio-fuels cost 600% more than the bunker fuel that cargo ships run on.

From Time

He’ll get a bunker dug out beneath Mar-a-Lago, and he’ll be hurried down there by tight-lipped men in suits every time there’s a thunderstorm.

Lawmakers barricaded themselves inside offices, bunkers and laid on the floors of the House and Senate.

From Time

The unmarked offices sprinkled around the building where backroom deals are typically made became makeshift bunkers.

From Time

Whatever the reason, Burton was committed enough to leave tiny Bunker Hill to seek out her beau.

Bunker, along with his brothers Herbert and Lamar, started buying silver in 1970, when it was $1.94 an ounce.

Nelson Bunker Hunt, who died this week, made and lost billions of dollars.

You feel like you need to bunker up, hide away, and arm yourself.

The bunker, so crucial during the final years of the Cold War in the Baltic, was only declassified in 2003.

Corner stone of Bunker hill monument laid with great and enthusiastic ceremonies; Lafayette being present.

Well, we couldn't even think Bunker Hill but what she'd pipe up about the Alamo.

The door in this bunker had been dropped probably when water was first discovered, which was a few minutes after the collision.

There was another water-tight door at the after end of the water-tight passage through the bunker immediately aft of D bulkhead.

Holding the transmitter tightly Hendricks called the code of the command bunker.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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