0 past simple and past participle of junk
1 to get rid of something because it is of no use or value
It is worth bearing in mind that they cannot be serviced; they must be junked and then one starts again.
Is it to be cluttered with disused platforms that are simply junked there for lack of any better alternative?
I say junked, because at the moment no one seems to be talking about the need to convert existing sets.
It is extraordinary that there has been no real analysis of the number of sets that will have to be junked unless we take a different route.
Is he also aware that our laws against blasphemy are a parcel of obsolescent nonsense which requires junking and that the sooner those laws are junked the better?
His backyard was a continually growing menagerie of metal sculpture, a kind of overwhelming garden of junked-up, rusting dreams.
The yard was overflowing with junked cars, tires, broken furniture, and concrete rubble.
Most studios declined the offer, the camera negatives were junked, and original release prints usually disposed of shortly after a theatrical run.