what your parents think you are, no doubt, they have no idea what a punk actually is, ie: mohawks, spiked collars, and the "rock on" hand sign all while listening to super intense death metal, that literally IS just screaming
Child: you're disrespecting my feelings, and not listening to what I'm saying
Parent: UR JUST A PUNK SHUT UP GET OUT OF MY HOUSE
Child: this is seriously hurting my feelings
Parent: UR FEELINGS? U PUNK U DONT HAVE FEELINGS LOOK WHAT U JUST SAID TO ME
Child: I said you were being a jerk, because you were antagonizing me and getting on my nerves, as well as emotionally abusing me.
Parent: *Proceeds to continue yelling in a similar fashion*
A subgenre of music that sprang forth from the bowels of two separate continents simultaneously just a tad before 1976 A.D . One, being Kings Road in London, England where shocking and loud fashion also tried sending a message to the Monarchy and Parliament that the youth of that era was not going to sit there quietly and obey. The second location of importance was The Bowery in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Setting themselves apart from their contemporaries across the pond, they gave not one shit about a message to the US Government. They were art students, drug addicts, groupies and weirdos.
Holy shit! Did you see the Mohawk that Punk has? It's at least a foot and a half high!
A term of endearment for someone who's a rowdy troublemaker, usually a smartalec, in a lovable sort of way.
Cousin 1: "I love my family, I really do! If I could've picked my own family, I would've picked this one!"
Cousin 2: "Out of all of my cousins... you're one of them."
Cousin 1: "F*** you, then, punk!"
By definition in today's African American communities, a derogatory term used against gay who dress in a flamboyant way, are loud, are messy, and ussually fight women
See also: fagg*t
Girl: I don't have a problem with gays but i hate punks
a term used by a shade tree conn artist with a nicrophillia addiction.
That's a Punk!
The first recorded use of the term (unknown origin) occurred in the early 1590s, with reference to a “prostitute, harlot.” The term “taffety punk,” a reference to “a well dressed whore,” appears in William Shakespeare’s All’s Well That Ends Well, penned between 1604 and 1605.
Hast thou made sureth to pay ye old punk?