A free service provided by Writers Nexus International

Writing Resources:
  • New Novelist Software
  • Writer Circles
  • Author Me
  • FirstWriter.com
  • Novel Advice
  • Robin's Nest for Writers
  • The Scriptorium
  • Women on Writing


A Writer's Dictionary:

hacked Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with H » H ... haematoma » hacked


hack1
verb hacked, hacking
    1. To cut or chop it roughly.
      Thesaurus: cut, chop, hew, cleave, gash, slice, lacerate; whack, kick; mangle, mutilate.
      Form: hack something down, away (often)
    2. To cut (a path, etc) eg through undergrowth.
      Form: hack something out (often)
    intr
    3. colloq
      To use a computer with skill, especially to obtain unauthorized access to (someone else's computer files).
      Form: hack into something (often)
    4. slang
      To be able to bear or suffer someone or something.
      Example: He can't hack it
    intr
    5. To cough in short dry spasms.
    6. football.rugby.
      To kick an opponent on the shins.
    7. To cut (a story, article, etc) in a damaging way.
noun
    1. A kick on the shins.
    2. A wound or rough cut, especially from a kick.
    3. A mattock or miner's pick2.
    4. A short dry cough.
    5. A chop or blow.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon tohaccian; 1970s in verb sense 3.





hack2
noun
    1. A horse kept for general riding, especially one for hire.
    2. A ride on horseback.
    3. An old or worn-out horse.
    4. A writer who produces dull, mediocre or routine work.
    5. A dogsbody.
    (US)
    6a. informal
      A taxi;
    (US)
    6b. informal
      A cab driver.
verb hacked, hacking
    tr & intr
    1. To ride a horse at a leisurely pace, usually for pleasure.
    2. To write (an article, etc) in a mediocre or tedious manner.
    intr
    3. To work as a hack.
adj
    1. Mediocre, banal or commonplace.
      Example: hack writer
Etymology: 17c: short form of hackney.



Click Here