Flunk

When “final” means truly finished.

Dear Word Detective: A group of friends and I were wondering about the etymology of “flunk,” as in to “flunk out” or to “flunk a course.” (The more I say it the weirder the word sounds.) Anyway, the usual sources say the origin is unknown, but I like to hear your theories on the matter. No pressure, of course! –Jenny Nunemacher.

No problem. I’ve never had fear of flunking. In fact, I’m the only person I know who has never had one of those dreams where you walk into a college class you’ve neglected to attend all semester and discover that the final exam is being held. Perhaps I was immunized by having it happen in real life.

To “flunk,” of course, means “to fail,” specifically “to fail utterly” and often “to fail spectacularly.” “Flunk” is usually used in academic contexts, although real-world uses are also common (“Lenny was cute but he flunked the not-living-in-his-parents’-basement test”).

It is true that “the usual sources” (most dictionaries) label “flunk” as “origin unknown,” but it would be more accurate to tag the word “origin uncertain.” We do know that “flunk” first appeared as US slang in the early 19th century with the general, non-academic sense of “to give up, to back out, to fail” (“They were, of course, exposed to the fire of the red-coats … but they didn’t flunk a bit,” 1850).

But “flunk” may well be a relic of 18th century college slang, inherited from our cousins across the pond. “Flunk” appears to be a modification of the verb “to funk,” British university slang meaning “to flinch or cower, to back out of,” based on the noun “funk” meaning “distress,” possibly derived from the Flemish word “fonck” meaning “agitation; distress.” There may also be a bit of the old American slang verb “to flink,” a variant of “to flinch,” mixed in there.

That noun “funk” is still very much with us, and we speak of someone sunk in a state of depression and anxiety as being “in a funk.” But the “funk” found in “funky” is, thankfully, from an entirely different “funk,” this one originally meaning “bad smell,” specifically a musty or moldy smell, or a smell of smoke (from the Old French “fungier,” to give off smoke”). In the early 20th century, “funky” was taken up by jazz musicians to mean “authentic, earthy, passionate.” So while “funky” cheese remains a bad thing, we can appreciate the beauty of “funky” music.

  1. Zev Shanken:

    Nice scouting through the forest of funk, flunk, flinch. Could flung be a source too? He did so poorly he was flung out of school. Also the obvious substitute for the eff word, as in to eff up.

  2. Keith Pugsley:

    Regarding the word Flunk. I am interested in seeing these early sources since this is a word I made up as a child (not having knowingly heard it before) when playing sport in the garden. I of course assumed I had invented a new word and the more I used it the more my school friends and others began to use it. The word in common usage in the UK synonymous with this was fluff. People fluffed their exams, or attempt do do something. I lived in a relatively small rural town in the South West of England. I doubt I would have heard it used elsewhere but it would be interesting to know if there was any measure of the increase in its usage in the UK. I attended school from the mid sixties.