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- nounrack (noun) · racks (plural noun) · the rack (noun)
- a cogged or toothed bar or rail engaging with a wheel or pinion, or using pegs to adjust the position of something:"a steering rack"
- historical(the rack)an instrument of torture consisting of a frame on which the victim was stretched by turning rollers to which the wrists and ankles were tied.
- a triangular structure for positioning the balls in pool. Compare with frame
- a single game of snooker.
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHvulgar slanga woman's breasts:"Arnie's woman is kinda bossy, but she's got a nice rack"
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHa set of antlers:"moose have the most impressive racks of all the antlered animals"
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHinformala bed.
verbrack (verb) · racks (third person present) · racked (past tense) · racked (past participle) · racking (present participle) · wrack (verb) · wracks (third person present) · wracked (past tense) · wracked (past participle) · wracking (present participle)OriginMiddle English: from Middle Dutch rec, Middle Low German rek ‘horizontal bar or shelf’, probably from recken ‘to stretch, reach’ (possibly the source of rack).nounrack (noun)- a horse's gait in which both hoofs on either side in turn are lifted almost simultaneously, and all four hoofs are off the ground together at certain moments.
verbrack (verb) · racks (third person present) · racked (past tense) · racked (past participle) · racking (present participle)- (of a horse) move with a rack gait.
Originmid 16th century: of unknown origin.verbrack (verb) · racks (third person present) · racked (past tense) · racked (past participle) · racking (present participle)- draw off (wine, beer, etc.) from the sediment in the barrel:"the wine is racked off into large oak casks"
Originlate 15th century: from Provençal arracar, from raca ‘stems and husks of grapes, dregs’.nounrack (noun) · racks (plural noun)- a mass of high, thick, fast-moving clouds:"there was a thin moon, a rack of cloud"
verbarchaicrack (verb) · racks (third person present) · racked (past tense) · racked (past participle) · racking (present participle)- (of a cloud) be driven before the wind:"a thin shred of cloud racking across the moon"
OriginMiddle English (denoting a rush or collision): probably of Scandinavian origin; compare with Norwegian and Swedish dialect rak ‘wreckage’, from reka ‘to drive’. Rack - Urban Dictionary
Urban Dictionary: Rack)
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