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munter

/ ˈmʌntə /

noun

  1. slang.
    an unattractive person
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of munter1

C20: of unknown origin
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Example Sentences

While living there with his girlfriend, the artist Gabriele Münter, he came home in twilight to see one of his own paintings on its side.

Sadie Munter and Karyssa Domingo are second-year medical students in San Diego, where Weena Joshi is a practicing pediatrician.

"We're warning investors to be very wary of some of the claims that are being made by crypto companies," said Paul Munter, SEC's acting chief accountant in an interview with the journal.

From Reuters

A panel of judges recognised Münter, 48, as one of the first athletes to use her platform to such prominent effect in raising awareness of environmental issues, as well as a continued and escalating effort over many years - often to the detriment of her career.

From BBC

Münter has been working with BBC Sport - using her background and passion for the environment and conservation to show how climate change and pollution are impacting wildlife in Florida.

From BBC

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About This Word

What else does munter mean?

Munter is a British insult for a person, often a woman, who is considered extremely ugly.

How is munter pronounced?

[muhn-ter]

Where does munter come from?

The British munter, first recorded in the 1990s, has an unknown origin, but there are several theories.

One is that munter comes from the Scottish-derived slang minger (“a stinker, stupid person”), also recorded in the 1990s. Another supposes munter came from the early 20th-century South African slang munt or muntu, a racial slur for Black South Africans. Yet another theory connects it to British, Australian, and New Zealand slang munted, meaning “intoxicated” or “destroyed.”

Discussions in the 1990s on a Usenet rave forum supports the munted theory. Users identified munter as early the 1990s as British student slang for a “drug user.” How munter went from “drug user” to “ugly person” is unclear, though it isn’t too hard to draw a line from “intoxicated” to “unpleasant.”

By the 2000s, munter was established as coarse British slang for an “ugly person,” especially a woman, with various colorful, shall we say, descriptions of what a munter looks like on Urban Dictionary.

How is munter used in real life?

When you hear munter, expect the speaker to be British. And, expect the object of the insult—often women—to be considered very unattractive.

Munter is also sometimes used to humorously describe other hideous things, such as animals or cars.

More examples of munter:

“A sexist police sergeant has kept his job despite being found guilty of misconduct for referring to a female job hunter as an ‘ugly munter.’”
—Rhett Allain, Wired, March 2018

Note

This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.

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