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A Writer's Dictionary:

sacked Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with S » S ... sacrosanctity » sacked


sack1
noun
    1. A large bag, especially one made of coarse cloth or paper.
      Thesaurus: bag, pouch, container, pocket.
    2. The amount a sack will hold; a sackful.
    3. colloq
      Dismissal from employment.
      Example: gave the caretaker the sack
      Example: She'll get the sack
      Thesaurus: dismissal, notice, discharge, the boot (slang), the axe (slang), pink slip (US slang).
      Form: the sack
    4. slang
      Bed.
      Form: the sack
    5. Amer football.
      The instance of intervening or tackling the quarterback while still in possession of the ball.
      Form: the sack
verb sacked, sacking
    1. To put into a sack or sacks.
    2. colloq
      To dismiss from employment.
      Thesaurus: dismiss, fire, lay off, discharge, cashier, can (US slang).
    3. Amer football.
      To tackle (the quarterback while still in possession of the ball).
Idiom: hit the sack
    slang
    To go to bed.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon sacc, from Latin saccus, from Greek sakkos bag.





sack2
verb
    sacked, sacking
    1. To plunder, pillage and destroy a town.
      Thesaurus: pillage, loot, plunder, lay waste, raze, demolish, ravage, devastate, maraud, desecrate, despoil.
noun
    1. The act of sacking a town.
      Thesaurus: plunder, ruin, destruction, rapine.
Etymology: 16c: from French mettre à sac to put one's loot into a bag; to plunder.



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