1 to play a musical instrument, usually not very well but often loudly:
2 a hollow sound like that made when an object is dropped heavily onto a surface:
3 making a hollow sound like that made when an object is dropped heavily onto a surface:
5 a sound like that made when a hollow object is dropped:
The stone dropped in the lake with a satisfying plunk.
Soaked socks, torn drum skins, hands crawling at the mesh of playpens while tinny xylophones plunked eerily pinching fingers.
People should plunk down two thousand dollars to live like "him" for a week.
This is called a splooge or plunk or sink.
The monologue which is plunked on the wall or plunked on the floor is very unsatisfactory to me.
He plunked his stock into a charitable foundation....
However, he concluded that it's not exactly worth plunking down another 32 bucks for.
He also finished second in the league with the 14 times he was hit by a pitch (the previous year he was plunked 12 times, fourth in the league).
The album contains more silence than sawing, though; her scrapes, scratches, plunks, and occasional notes on the violin are often separated by long stretches of it.