- WHACK Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of WHACK is to strike with a smart or resounding blow How to use whack in a sentence
- WHACK | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
Take a whack at your homework, then ask for help if you need it They're prepared to pay top whack for goods like this You can use Carol's old bike - the gears are out of whack, but it still goes He whacked his newspaper on the back of the chair as he talked She gripped her racket with both hands and gave the ball a hard whack
- whack - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
whack (third-person singular simple present whacks, present participle whacking, simple past and past participle whacked) To hit, slap or strike quotations
- Whack - definition of whack by The Free Dictionary
Define whack whack synonyms, whack pronunciation, whack translation, English dictionary definition of whack v whacked , whack·ing , whacks v tr 1 To strike with a sharp blow; slap 2 Slang To kill deliberately; murder v intr To deal a sharp, resounding
- WHACK definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
You really have to whack the ball [VERB noun] Someone whacked him on the head [VERB noun preposition]
- whack noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of whack noun in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more
- whack - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
whack hwæk, wæk v to strike or hit with or as if with a strong, loud blow: [~ + object] She whacked the stick against the table [no object] He whacked at the ball and missed
- Whack Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
She took a whack at solving the puzzle I can't open the jar Do you want to take a whack at it? [=do you want to try to open it?]
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