Idioms for hack
hack it, Slang.
to handle or cope with a situation or an assignment adequately and calmly: The new recruit just can't hack it.
Origin of hack
1
1150–1200; Middle English
hacken; compare Old English
tōhaccian to hack to pieces; cognate with Dutch
hakken, German
hacken
synonym study for hack
1. mangle, haggle.
synonym study for hack
1. See
cut.
Words nearby hack
hachoo,
hachure,
hacienda,
hacienda heights,
haciendado,
hack,
hack board,
hack hammer,
hack house,
hack off,
hackamore
Definition for hack (2 of 3)
Origin of hack
2
First recorded in 1680–90; short for
hackney
Definition for hack (3 of 3)
hack
3
[ hak ]
/ hæk /
noun
a rack for drying food, as fish.
a rack for holding fodder for livestock.
a low pile of unburnt bricks in the course of drying.
verb (used with object)
to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
Falconry.
to train (a young hawk) by letting it fly freely and feeding it at a hack board or a hack house.
Origin of hack
3
First recorded in 1565–75; variant of
hatch2
Example sentences from the Web for hack
British Dictionary definitions for hack (1 of 3)
hack
1
/ (hæk) /
verb
noun
See also
hack off
Word Origin for hack
Old English
haccian; related to Old Frisian
hackia, Middle High German
hacken
British Dictionary definitions for hack (2 of 3)
hack
2
/ (hæk) /
noun
verb
adjective
(prenominal)
banal, mediocre, or unoriginal
hack writing
Word Origin for hack
C17: short for
hackney
British Dictionary definitions for hack (3 of 3)
hack
3
/ (hæk) /
noun
a rack used for fodder for livestock
a board on which meat is placed for a hawk
a pile or row of unfired bricks stacked to dry
verb (tr)
to place (fodder) in a hack
to place (bricks) in a hack
Word Origin for hack
C16: variant of
hatch ²