Advertisement
Advertisement
shack
1[shak]
verb phrase
shack up
to live together as spouses without being legally married.
to have illicit sexual relations.
to live in a shack.
He's shacked up in the mountains.
shack
2[shak]
verb (used with object)
to chase and throw back; to retrieve.
to shack a ground ball.
shack
1/ ʃæk /
noun
a roughly built hut
temporary accommodation put together by squatters
verb
See shack up
shack
2/ ʃæk /
verb
dialect, to evade (work or responsibility)
Word History and Origins
Origin of shack1
Word History and Origins
Origin of shack1
Example Sentences
Two days after the incident, Mr Singh and his family, which includes his two-year-old grandson, moved to a bamboo-and-tarpaulin shack, which they set up on a patch of land a few meters from his house.
At the moment he lives in the shadow of his former home, where other former Usindiso building residents have put up shacks in an informal settlement known as Emaxhoseni.
They slept in rickety shacks, used communal bathrooms and showered in water that “was a very nice shade of brown,” Carter remembered with a laugh.
The best brunches in L.A. include seafood towers at a Virgil Village clam shack, live jazz and bottomless mimosas in Sherman Oaks and tableside cinnamon rolls and Bloody Marys in Brentwood, plus much more.
This summer, that vision becomes reality as Soul & Smoke, the beloved casual BBQ joint from Evanston, Illinois, expands its flagship location—turning a once-humble smoke shack into a destination for refined, fire-driven dining.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse