cack

English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

    OnomatopoeiaCategory:English onomatopoeias#CACK; see cackle.

    Noun

    cack (plural cacks)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English nouns#CACKCategory:English countable nouns#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

    1. A squawk.
      • 1897, Frank Michler Chapman, Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America, page 380:
        Of course, so excitable a nature must find other than physical outlet for his irrepressible energy, and he accompanies his movements by more or less appropriate notes: scolding cacks, clinking, metallic rattles, musical trills, tree-toadlike krrrings – in fact, he possesses an almost endless vocabulary .
        Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      • 1916, Frank Michler Chapman, Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America, page 493:
        [] for on occasions he gives utterance to an entirely uncharacteristic series of cacking notes, and even mounts high in the tree to sing a hesitating medley of the same unmusical cacks, broken whistled calls, and attempted trills.
        Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        Category:Quotation templates to be cleaned
      • 2014, Stanley H. Anderson, John R. Squires, The Prairie Falcon, page 4:
        When birds approach their cliffs in the spring, they often emit a series of rapidly repeated cacks, or notes of varying pitches. Sometimes the notes are very spirited; others are very soft. Male cacks tend to be higher pitched than those of females.
        Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
    2. A discordant note.
    3. (informalCategory:English informal terms#CACK) A cackling goose (Branta hutchinsii)

    Verb

    cack (third-person singular simple present cacks, present participle cacking, simple past and past participle cacked)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English verbs#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

    1. (of a bird) To squawk.
    2. (brass instrument technique) To incorrectly play a note by hitting a partial other than the one intended.
      The bugler hopes not to cack during his performance.Category:English terms with usage examples#CACK
    3. (Australian slangCategory:Australian English#CACKCategory:Australian slang#CACK) To laugh.
      I had to cack when you fell down the stairs.Category:English terms with usage examples#CACK

    See also

    Etymology 2

      From Middle EnglishCategory:English terms inherited from Middle English#CACKCategory:English terms derived from Middle English#CACK cakken, from Old EnglishCategory:English terms inherited from Old English#CACKCategory:English terms derived from Old English#CACK *cacian, from Old EnglishCategory:English terms derived from Old English#CACK cac (dung; excrement), from LatinCategory:English terms derived from Latin#CACK cacāre (excrete feces).

      Cognate with English caca. Compare Dutch kakken (to defecate), German kacken (to relieve oneself; defecate), Latin cacō (defecate) (see there for more); compare also Irish cac (feces, excrement).

      Verb

      cack (third-person singular simple present cacks, present participle cacking, simple past and past participle cacked)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English verbs#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

      1. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#CACK) To defecate.
        • 2014, 'Rock Rampant', Mauve Flush, page 245:
          Can't cack... won't cack, My bum hole has gone on strike, I've huffed and puffed, grunted and groaned, And squeezed as hard as I liked, I've leant myself backwards, leant to the front, Raised my knees and then put them back, I've gripped the seat and pushed like hell, But still...I can't have a cack.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      2. (transitiveCategory:English transitive verbs#CACK) To defecate (on); to shit.
      3. (transitiveCategory:English transitive verbs#CACK) To excrete (something) by defecation.
        • 2016, Nicholas Blincoe, Jello Salad, Canelo, →ISBN:
          He smelled the ferrous oxide of blood and the farmyard stench of shit. He'd cacked it. He was empty and he'd cacked his load. The brushman came over, lisping slightly []
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      4. (USCategory:American English#CACK, slangCategory:English slang#CACK) To kill.
        He tried to shoot me, so I cacked him.Category:English terms with usage examples#CACK
      5. To cheat.
        • 1893, John Cleland, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (Fanny Hill), page 282:
          Thus was I then to lose my faithfull preceptress, as did the philosophers of the town the white crow of her profession: for besides that she never ransacked her customers, whose taste too she ever studiously consulted, she never cacked her pupils with unconscionable extortions, nor ever put their hard earnings, as she called them, under the contribution of poundage.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      Synonyms
      Derived terms
      Translations

      Noun

      cack (countable and uncountable, plural cacks)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English nouns#CACKCategory:English uncountable nouns#CACKCategory:English countable nouns#CACKCategory:English countable nouns#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

      1. An act of defecation.
        • 2014, 'Rock Rampant', Mauve Flush, page 245:
          Can't cack... won't cack, My bum hole has gone on strike, I've huffed and puffed, grunted and groaned, And squeezed as hard as I liked, I've leant myself backwards, leant to the front, Raised my knees and then put them back, I've gripped the seat and pushed like hell, But still...I can't have a cack.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      2. (slangCategory:English slang#CACK) Excrement.
        • 2013, Nick Barlay, Hooky Gear:
          I dive back in along the cobbles, step over the cack, wall an fence closin me down, barbed wire left, razor wire right, follow by puttied-in broken glass, spike rails an stuck-on warnings about dogs.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2016, Patricia Rice, Theory of Magic:
          " And have bird cack on their heads , " Jacques agreed cheerfully, to Ash's relief.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      3. (slangCategory:English slang#CACK) Rubbish; anything worthless.
        • 2009, Monica Ali, In The Kitchen, page 425:
          'See that' said the man, pointing with his fork at a trace of soemthing on the rim, 'that's not been washed properly. That's a bit of old cack on there.'
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2013, Gemma Files, “Nanny Grey”, in Ellen Datlow, editor, The Best Horror of the Year:
          At first, he genuinely didn't recognize her without all that high-gloss cack on her face.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2017, Bob Mortimer & Andy Dawson, The World of Football According to Athletico Mince, page 1996:
          Not thinking, because he's got it in his hand, he wipes her mouth with the dirty dishcloth – leaves a little bit of cack on her lips, but she doesn't notice .
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2021 September 2, Paul Simms, “The Prisoner” (21:35 from the start), in What We Do in the Shadows, season 3, episode 1, spoken by Laszlo Cravensworth (Matt Berry):
          “This building. Eesh! Still sends shivers through my bones.” “Last time we were here we were sentenced to death by the Vampiric Council.” “Had we not escaped from this cack house...” “I saved them.” “We saved them.” “Had we not escaped from this fluorescent mausoleum, we'd be fucking dead.”
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2023, Helen Aitchison, The Life and Love (Attempts) of Kitty Cook:
          Or super fit cycle/running bods who won't let me lie like a bag of cack on the sofa on a Sunday afternoon.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      Synonyms
      Derived terms
      Translations

      Etymology 3

      From cock.

      Noun

      cack (uncountable)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English nouns#CACKCategory:English uncountable nouns#CACKCategory:English uncountable nouns#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

      1. (slangCategory:English slang#CACK) Penis.

      Etymology 4

      Of unknown origin. Possibly from ScotsCategory:English terms borrowed from Scots#CACKCategory:English terms derived from Scots#CACK cack (soft shoe).

      Noun

      cack (plural cacks)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English nouns#CACKCategory:English countable nouns#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

      1. An inexpensive boot or shoe made in the 19th or early 20th century for a baby or young child.
        • 1903 December 23, John C. Thompson, “Deceiving Customers”, in Shoe Retailer and Boots and Shoes Weekly, volume 48, page 81:
          To one handling shoes, from cacks to footwear for the oldest men and women , and taking into consideration the trade as it is handled at large not simply in our city , the universally ac- knowledged metropolis of the world , I desire to say that to my mind there is more fakism used to sell shoes than to sell any other necessary article.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 1981, Paul Gustaf Faler, Mechanics and Manufacturers in the Early Industrial Revolution, page 91:
          Nathan D. Chase, a well-to-do boss who accumulated enough wealth to retire in 1850 at middle age, observed that the prices for making shoes remained low from 1837 to 1842: 4 cents for red-bottomed cacks, 8 cents for women's turned slippers, 10 cents for thick-heeled runrounds, 12 cents for set heels, 20 cents for welts.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 1897 September 22, C.P. Woodruff, “Rochester, N.Y”, in Boot and Shoe Recorder, volume 31, page 107:
          In the cacks for infants I noticed a tasty little patent leather foxed with cloth top, an ox blood slipper with dainty bow, and then there are others with green cloth tops, Scotch plaids and vesting tops in a great variety of combinations.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
      2. (slangCategory:English slang#CACK) A young child.
        • 1908, Hugh J. Hughes, “A Boy's Day”, in Harper's Weekly, volume 52, page 52:
          Ma is calling breakfast. The little cacks are up. Billy, who is only six –and you are eight! –Billy tried to wash himself and got some soap in his eyes. Funny that little cacks like that always get soap in their eyes!
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2000, Anthony Akerman, Dark Outsider: Three Plays, page 123:
          Seniors bully cacks because they were bullied as cacks. Old boys who were miserable here send their sons here to make them miserable. It's called tradition.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 2009, Matthew Knight, Between the Lines: The Spirit of South African Rugby, page 106:
          Even fresh Cacks with some prowess on the rugby or cricket field are likely to get it slightly easier than their quivering peers.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK

      Etymology 5

      Noun

      cack (plural cacks)Category:English lemmas#CACKCategory:English nouns#CACKCategory:English countable nouns#CACKCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#CACKCategory:Pages with entries#CACKCategory:Pages with 1 entry#CACK

      1. obsolete spelling of cake (any sense)
        • 1625, Samuel Purchas, Purchas His Pilgrimes: In Fiue Bookes, page 395:
          Eye colours for dying blew, almost as good as Indico, made vp in round cacks or pieces, and packed one hundred cacks in a Fardell, worth the Fardell, fiftie to sixtie.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 1888, Duane Hamilton Hurd, History of Essex County, Massachusetts, page 322:
          the gouerners Expences from the Coart of election, 1651, till the end of October, 1651; to bear & cacks [ beer and cakes ] 6d.; bear and cacks to himself and som other gentlemen, 18. 2d.; bear and cacks with Mr. Downing, 1s. 6d.; bear & a cack, 6d. -3s. 8d. "
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK
        • 1897, Edward Field, The Colonial Tavern, page 51:
          The picture of Governor Endicott sitting at table in the "Anchor" eating "cacks" and drinking "beare" robs this picturesque character in Colonial history of some of its lustre.
          Category:English terms with quotations#CACK

      References

      • cack”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
      Category:en:Bodily functions#CACKCategory:en:Death#CACKCategory:en:Feces#CACKCategory:en:Genitalia#CACKCategory:en:Laughter#CACKCategory:en:Sex#CACK
      Category:American English Category:Australian English Category:Australian slang Category:English 1-syllable words Category:English countable nouns Category:English informal terms Category:English intransitive verbs Category:English lemmas Category:English nouns Category:English onomatopoeias Category:English slang Category:English terms borrowed from Scots Category:English terms derived from Latin Category:English terms derived from Middle English Category:English terms derived from Old English Category:English terms derived from Scots Category:English terms inherited from Middle English Category:English terms inherited from Old English Category:English terms with IPA pronunciation Category:English terms with audio pronunciation Category:English terms with quotations Category:English terms with usage examples Category:English transitive verbs Category:English uncountable nouns Category:English verbs Category:Entries with translation boxes Category:Pages with 1 entry Category:Pages with entries Category:Quotation templates to be cleaned Category:Rhymes:English/æk Category:Rhymes:English/æk/1 syllable Category:Terms with Afrikaans translations Category:Terms with Albanian translations Category:Terms with Ancient Greek translations Category:Terms with Armenian translations Category:Terms with Basque translations Category:Terms with Breton translations Category:Terms with Catalan translations Category:Terms with Cornish translations Category:Terms with Dutch translations Category:Terms with Estonian translations Category:Terms with Finnish translations Category:Terms with French translations Category:Terms with Galician translations Category:Terms with German translations Category:Terms with Greek translations Category:Terms with Hijazi Arabic translations Category:Terms with Hungarian translations Category:Terms with Irish translations Category:Terms with Italian translations Category:Terms with Krio translations Category:Terms with Latin translations Category:Terms with Latvian translations Category:Terms with Lithuanian translations Category:Terms with Macedonian translations Category:Terms with Mauritian Creole translations Category:Terms with Mazanderani translations Category:Terms with Middle Armenian translations Category:Terms with Middle English translations Category:Terms with Northern Kurdish translations Category:Terms with Occitan translations Category:Terms with Old English translations Category:Terms with Pashto translations Category:Terms with Persian translations Category:Terms with Phuthi translations Category:Terms with Portuguese translations Category:Terms with Romanian translations Category:Terms with Russian translations Category:Terms with Scottish Gaelic translations Category:Terms with Serbo-Croatian translations Category:Terms with Sotho translations Category:Terms with Spanish translations Category:Terms with Sranan Tongo translations Category:Terms with Turkish translations Category:Terms with Welsh translations Category:Terms with Wik-Mungkan translations Category:en:Bodily functions Category:en:Death Category:en:Feces Category:en:Genitalia Category:en:Laughter Category:en:Sex