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    sack
    [sak]
    noun
    sack (noun) · sacks (plural noun) · sack dress (noun) · sack dresses (plural noun) · the sack (noun)
    1. a large bag made of a strong material such as burlap, thick paper, or plastic, used for storing and carrying goods.
      • the contents of a sack or the amount it can contain:
        "a sack of flour"
    2. a woman's short loose unwaisted dress, typically narrowing at the hem, popular especially in the 1950s.
      • historical
        a woman's long loose gown.
      • a decorative piece of dress material fastened to the shoulders of a woman's gown in loose pleats and forming a long train, fashionable in the 18th century.
    3. informal
      (the sack)
      dismissal from employment:
      "he got the sack for swearing" · "they were given the sack"
    4. informal
      (the sack)
      bed, especially as regarded as a place for sex:
      "he stars as a man dumped by his partner for being a bit dull in the sack"
    5. baseball
      informal
      a base.
    6. american football
      an act of tackling a quarterback behind the line of scrimmage before he can throw a pass.
    verb
    sack (verb) · sacks (third person present) · sacked (past tense) · sacked (past participle) · sacking (present participle)
    1. informal
      dismiss from employment:
      "any official found to be involved would be sacked on the spot"
    2. american football
      tackle (a quarterback) behind the line of scrimmage before they can throw a pass:
      "Oregon intercepted five of his passes and sacked him five times"
    3. rare
      put into a sack or sacks:
      "a small part of his wheat had been sacked"
    Origin
    Old English sacc, from Latin saccus ‘sack, sackcloth’, from Greek sakkos, of Semitic origin. Sense 1 of the verb dates from the mid 19th century.
    sack
    [sak]
    verb
    sack (verb) · sacks (third person present) · sacked (past tense) · sacked (past participle) · sacking (present participle)
    1. (chiefly in historical contexts) plunder and destroy (a captured town, building, or other place):
      "the fort was rebuilt in AD 158 and was sacked again in AD 197"
    noun
    sack (noun) · sacks (plural noun)
    1. the pillaging of a town or city:
      "the sack of Rome"
    Origin
    mid 16th century: from French sac, in the phrase mettre à sac ‘put to sack’, on the model of Italian fare il sacco, mettere a sacco, which perhaps originally referred to filling a sack with plunder.
    sack
    [sak]
    noun
    historical
    sack (noun)
    1. a dry white wine formerly imported into Britain from Spain and the Canary Islands:
      "the Poet Laureate traditionally gets a ‘butt of sack’, equivalent to roughly 600 bottles of sherry"
    Origin
    early 16th century: from the phrase wyne seck, from French vin sec ‘dry wine’.
    sack dress
    [ˈsak ˌdres]
    noun
    sack (noun)
    1. a woman's short, loose, unwaisted dress, originally fashionable in the 1950s.
    Translate sack to
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    noun
    1. a large bag made of a strong material such as burlap, thick paper, or plastic, used for storing and carrying goods.
      • dismissal from employment:
        termination of employment
        one's marching orders
      • bed, especially as regarded as a place for sex:
      verb
      1. (chiefly in historical contexts) plunder and destroy (a captured town, building, or other place):
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    2. People also ask
      Is sack a noun?[VERB noun] Sack is also a noun . People who make mistakes can be given the sack the same day. When an army sacks a town or city, they destroy it, taking away all valuable things. In 1527 Imperial troops sacked the French ambassador's residence in Rome. [VERB noun] Sack is also a noun.
      What is a sack used for?sack (plural sacks) A bag; especially a large bag of strong, coarse material for storage and handling of various commodities, such as potatoes, coal, coffee; or, a bag with handles used at a supermarket, a grocery sack; or, a small bag for small items, a satchel.
      What does sack mean in Spanish?He got the sack from his last job. He was sacked for being late. 袋子, 大布袋, 麻袋… 袋子, 大布袋, 麻袋… saco, saqueo, despedir… saco, sacola, saque… Need a translator? Get a quick, free translation! SACK meaning: 1. a large bag made of paper, plastic, or cloth and used to carry or store things 2. When someone….
      What is the difference between sack and sack?Other forms: sacks; sacked; sacking A sack is a bag. In some parts of the country, store clerks put your stuff in a sack, but in other parts the same stuff goes in a bag. Sack is also an exciting verb. While a sack is often just a bag, as a verb it can do a lot more. A boss might sack, or fire, an employee who’s no longer needed.
       
    3. The term "sack" has two main meanings:12
      1. A paper or plastic bag used to carry things, especially items bought in a food shop.
      2. A large bag with no handles, made of strong rough material or strong paper or plastic, used for storing and carrying items such as flour, coal, etc.
      Learn more:
      a paper or plastic bag used to carry things, especially things bought in a food shop: a sack of groceries
      dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/sack
      sack noun /sæk/ /sæk/ Idioms [countable] a large bag with no handles, made of strong rough material or strong paper or plastic, used for storing and carrying, for example flour, coal, etc.
      www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/engli…
       
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