Advertisement
Advertisement
sack
1[sak]
noun
a large bag of strong, coarsely woven material, as for grain, potatoes, or coal.
the amount a sack holds.
a bag.
a sack of candy.
Informal., the sack, dismissal or discharge, as from a job.
to get the sack.
Slang., the sack, bed, often as the site of sexual activity.
It's past noon, but I bet that lazybones is still in the sack.
If you want the relationship to be more than just a night in the sack, you have to work at it.
Also sacque
a loose-fitting dress, as a gown with a Watteau back, especially one fashionable in the late 17th century and much of the 18th century.
a loose-fitting coat, jacket, or cape.
Baseball., a base.
South Midland U.S., the udder of a cow.
verb (used with object)
to put into a sack or sacks.
Football., to tackle (the quarterback) behind the line of scrimmage before the quarterback is able to throw a pass.
Informal., to dismiss or discharge, as from a job.
verb phrase
sack out, to go to bed; fall asleep.
sack
2[sak]
verb (used with object)
to pillage or loot after capture; plunder.
to sack a city.
noun
the plundering of a captured place; pillage.
the sack of Troy.
Synonyms: ruin, destruction
sack
3[sak]
noun
a strong light-colored wine formerly imported from Spain and the Canary Islands.
sack
1/ sæk /
noun
a large bag made of coarse cloth, thick paper, etc, used as a container
Also called: sackful. the amount contained in a sack, sometimes used as a unit of measurement
a woman's loose tube-shaped dress
Also called: sacque. a woman's full loose hip-length jacket, worn in the 18th and mid-20th centuries
short for rucksack
Also called (in Britain and certain other countries): bye. cricket a run scored off a ball not struck by the batsman: allotted to the team as an extra and not to the individual batsman
informal, dismissal from employment
a slang word for bed
slang, to go to bed
uncouth
verb
informal, to dismiss from employment
to put into a sack or sacks
sack
2/ sæk /
noun
the plundering of a place by an army or mob, usually involving destruction, slaughter, etc
American football a tackle on a quarterback which brings him down before he has passed the ball
verb
(tr) to plunder and partially destroy (a place)
American football to tackle and bring down a quarterback before he has passed the ball
sack
3/ sæk /
noun
archaic, any dry white wine formerly imported into Britain from SW Europe
Other Word Forms
- sacklike adjective
- sacker noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of sack1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sack1
Origin of sack2
Origin of sack3
Idioms and Phrases
leave holding the sack. bag.
hit the sack, to go to bed; go to sleep.
He never hits the sack before midnight.
More idioms and phrases containing sack
- get the ax (sack)
- hit the hay (sack)
- sad sack
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But Jukes insisted that failing officers will not get away with just being sacked.
In her first broadcast interview since being sacked, she told the BBC's Nick Robinson attempts to cut disability benefits and winter fuel payments had left voters questioning "whose side we are on".
Lord Mandelson was sacked last week after the publication of emails that showed the Labour peer had sent supportive messages to Epstein as he faced jail in 2008.
Cook denied the allegations and said the president had no authority to sack her.
Pilots, medical professionals, teachers and one Secret Service employee are among those who have been suspended or sacked for social media posts that were deemed inappropriate about Kirk's death.
Advertisement
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse