Unk Wunk was irritated, probably, because he could not have the salt he wanted.
He gave a great jump as Unk Wunk hove into sight, covered all over with the dead leaves that his barbed quills had picked up on his way downhill, and lay quiet where he thought the ferns would hide him.
Then, between us, Unk Wunk sat up on his haunches, took the pork in his fore paws and sucked the salt out of it, as if he had never a concern and never an enemy in the wide world.
If so, Unk Wunk has more in his sleepy, stupid head than we have given him credit for, and there is a very interesting lesson awaiting him who shall first find and enter the porcupine school.
Indeed, if you have one question when you meet Unk Wunk for the first time, you will have twenty after you have studied him for a season or two.
No wonder Unk Wunk has no fear or anxiety when he rolls himself into a ball, protected at every point by such terrible weapons.
Mooween the bear is the only one of the wood folk who has learned the trick of attacking Unk Wunk without injury to himself.
Unk Wunk was out for fun that afternoon, and had rolled down the hill for the joy of the swift motion and the dizzy feeling afterwards, as other wood folk do.
That also is usually a vain proceeding; for before Mooween can scramble down after his game, Unk Wunk is already up another tree and sleeping, as if nothing had happened, on another branch.
There was nothing on the hill above, no rustle or suggestion of any hunting animal to answer the question; so I followed Unk Wunk on his aimless wanderings along the foot of the ridge.
He kinder wunk me out to one side of the waitin'-room, and asked me "if I would try to get him a license to steal horses.
But I wouldn't want to take my oath whether he wunk or not, but I thought he wunk.
Chancing to stroll to the pool, the fox concealed himself in a leafy thicket to wait for game, which often came to the pool, and peering out from behind the rushes whom should he see but Unk-Wunk grubbing for lily roots.
Now Unk-Wunk would never have escaped from the sharp teeth of the sly weasel had not his quills been longer and sharper than his unfortunate brothers.
A sudden swift slap, and Unk-Wunk had played his joke.
A hollow beech log lay conveniently at hand, and inside this Unk-Wunk crawled.
Unk-Wunk being of a particularly bold, independent nature, his mother soon left him, and went off to live with a colony of hedgehogs who had located their camp on a distant ledge.
In vain did the brave little cock partridge drum at him, trying to mislead Unk-Wunk and turn his attention away from the mother partridge and her little brood, which scattered like fallen beech leaves in all directions.
One autumn evening Unk-Wunk visited the marsh pool; his desire for a feast of lily roots, before the pool froze over, was keen upon him.
It did not take the sly Unk-Wunk long to rid himself of the leaves, and plunge into the pool which he now had all to himself.
They had sighted the fox, however, long before he arrived at the log, and instantly Unk-Wunk changed his position inside the log.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "wunk" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.