(n): any body part visible externally
(n): either of two soft fleshy milk-secreting glandular organs on the chest of a woman
(n): milk-secreting organ of female mammals
(n): meat carved from the breast of a fowl
(n): an individual quantity of food or drink taken as part of a meal
(n): the part of an animal's body that corresponds to a person's chest
(n): any body part visible externally
(v): meet at breast level
(v): be adjacent or come together
(v): reach the summit (of a mountain)
(v): reach a destination, either real or abstract
(v): confront bodily
(v): oppose, as in hostility or a competition
Ted: These two new nurses have wonderful breasts.
The Todd: Hey, they have names!
[pointing to each breast] Tina, Marge, Sloppy and Mr Snuggles.
Laverne: Sloppy's bigger than Mr Snuggles.
(Scrubs, Ep. 5.2: My rite of passage)
Yes, it appears to be using trunk in the sense of chest (a storage box for body parts?) or torso. As in the bird robin redbreast which has a reddish chest, not as in having a red suitcase or a red mammary gland, which would make it a tit I think, and ... um, where was I?
Consult WeirdNet and it tells you trunk is 'the main stem of a tree'; that's actually pretty sensible as a first definition, but here the images get worse.
In all seriousness, I read this definition and thought it meant "trunk" as in "steamer trunk," like a footlocker.
In that case, bilby is definitely on the mark. :-)
I think it may be treating breasts as a variant of breast and supplying the same definition.
Hahaha! Oh, this one gets my vote for weirdest WeirdNet definition.
WeirdNET, WeirdNET, WeirdNET. There are a few things your parents may not have fully explained to you.
"From under loose sweaters and tight blouses their breasts threaten my independence like the nosecaps of atomic missiles." - 'Lanark', Alasdair Gray.