sacked


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sack 1

 (săk)
n.
1.
a. A bag, especially one made of strong material for holding grain or objects in bulk.
b. The amount that a sack can hold: sold two sacks of rice.
2. also sacque A short loose-fitting garment for women and children.
3. Slang Dismissal from employment: finally got the sack after a year of ineptitude.
4. Informal A bed, mattress, or sleeping bag: hit the sack at 10:00.
5. Baseball A base.
6. Football A successful attempt at sacking the quarterback.
tr.v. sacked, sack·ing, sacks
1. To place into a sack: sacked the groceries.
2. Slang To discharge from employment: sacked the workers who were caught embezzling. See Synonyms at dismiss.
3. Football To tackle (a quarterback attempting to pass the ball) behind the line of scrimmage.
Phrasal Verb:
sack out Slang
To sleep.

[Middle English, from Old English sacc, from Latin saccus, from Greek sakkos, of Semitic origin; see śqq in Semitic roots.]
Word History: The ordinary word sack carries within it a few thousand years of commercial history. The Greeks got their word sakkos, "a bag made out of coarse cloth or hair," from the Phoenicians with whom they traded. The Phoenician word does not happen to be attested in any Phoenician writings that survive from antiquity, but words related to it can be found in the other Semitic languages, such as Hebrew śaq and Akkadian saqqu. The Greeks then passed the sack, as it were, to the Romans as Latin saccus, "a large bag or sack." The Latin word was then transmitted to the Germanic tribes with whom the Romans traded, and they gave it the form *sakkiz. (Similarly, many other languages of Europe, including Irish, Welsh, Albanian, Hungarian, Czech, Polish, and Russian, also have words derived from Greek sakkos or Latin saccus.) The speakers of Old English used two forms of the word, sæcc, meaning "sackcloth" and descending from Germanic *sakkiz, as well as sacc, meaning "a sack, a bag" and borrowed directly from Latin. The second Old English form is the ancestor of our sack.

sack 2

 (săk)
tr.v. sacked, sack·ing, sacks
To rob (a town, for example) of goods or valuables, especially after capture.
n.
The looting or pillaging of a captured city or town.

[Probably from French (mettre à) sac, (to put in) a sack, from Old French sac, sack, from Latin saccus, sack, bag; see sack1.]

sack 3

 (săk)
n.
Any of various light, dry, strong wines from Spain and the Canary Islands, imported to England in the 1500s and 1600s.

[From French (vin) sec, dry (wine), from Old French, from Latin siccus, dry.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Adj.1.sacked - having been robbed and destroyed by force and violence; "the raped countryside"
destroyed - spoiled or ruined or demolished; "war left many cities destroyed"; "Alzheimer's is responsible for her destroyed mind"
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
To be precise eight have been sacked and Guus Hiddink, twice, and Rafa Benitez have left after spells as caretaker or interim boss.
Summary: Muzaffarabad (Pakistan-occupied Kashmir) [Pakistan], Nov.23 (ANI): Over a hundred Kashmiri workers engaged at Neelum Jhelum Hydro Electric Project in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir have been sacked by CGG-CMEC, a Chinese consortium.
That was the text Roy Keane sent his old roommate Graham Kavanagh after the former Ireland international was sacked by Carlisle.
AN ABATTOIR worker has won more than PS30,000 after being unfairly sacked over remarks made on Facebook.
- @GNEV2 So Michael Laudrup sacked, been very poor since winning capital one cup so have say not surprised.
ISLAMABAD, February 25, 2011 (Frontier Star): The sacked area managers of State Life Insurance Corporation of Pakistan staged a protest demonstration in front of the Parliament House for their reinstatement on Thursday.
We also "sacked out" young colts by tying sacks on their tails and to their saddle stirrups and by waving the sacks gently in front of them.
SOCIAL workers are campaigning to reinstate a manager who was sacked for refusing an order he thought was ``morally and legally unjustified''.
The Imperial conquest of Rome in May of 1527, in which troops led initially by Charles of Bourbon sacked and occupied the city, has traditionally been viewed as a political and cultural watershed.
PESHAWAR -- The sacked employees of Abdul Wali Khan University Mardan (AWKUM) have described their termination from service as a sheer injustice and threatened to commit self-immolation in front of the provincial assembly if they are not reinstated immediately.
* Frank De Boer (Crystal Palace) -- Sacked on September 11, 2017 * Craig Shakespeare (Leicester) -- Sacked on October 17, 2017 * Ronald Koeman (Everton) -- Sacked on October 23, 2017 * Slaven Bilic (West Ham) -- Sacked on November 6, 2017 * Tony Pulis (West Bromwich Albion) -- Sacked on November 20, 2017 * Paul Clement (Swansea) -- Sacked on December 20, 2017 * Mark Hughes (Stoke) -- Sacked on January 6, 2018 * Marco Silva (Watford) -- Sacked on January 21, 2018 * Mauricio Pellegrino (Southampton) -- Sacked on March 12, 2018 * Alan Pardew (West Bromwich Albion) -- Sacked on April 2, 2018 * Sam Allardyce (Everton) -- Sacked on May 16, 2018 * David Moyes (West Ham) -- Left on May 16, 2018