cack

English

Etymology 1

Onomatopoeia.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kæk/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -æk

Noun

cack (plural cacks)

  1. A squawk.
    • 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.
  2. A discordant note.

Verb

cack (third-person singular simple present cacks, present participle cacking, simple past and past participle cacked)

  1. (of a bird) To squawk.
    • 1990, P. H. Liotta, Learning to Fly, page 32:
      Still fluffy with down, she often attacks the other birds, cacking and flashing her wings, or threatens me as I watch through the tiny peephole of the near box.
    • 2000, Minnesota Ornithologists′ Union, The Loon, Volumes 72-74, page 37,
      While the Gyrfalcon cacked loudly on each stoop, the owl did not scream.
    • 2007, Turk Allcott, Time Leak, page 63:
      Peckle snitted them off and cacked at them. Then he flew up by the rope-tie spot and puffed out his chest and then the wrens made another dash for the scraps and he dove down and cacked them away.
  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.

Etymology 2

From Middle English cakken, from Old English *cacian, from Old English cac (dung; excrement), of uncertain origin and relation. Cognate with English caca. Compare Dutch kakken (to defecate), German kacken (to relieve oneself; defecate), Latin cacāre (to defecate); cf. also Irish cac (feces, excrement).

Verb

cack (third-person singular simple present cacks, present participle cacking, simple past and past participle cacked)

  1. (intransitive) To defecate.
    • 2005, M. J. Simpson, Hitchhiker: A Biography of Douglas Adams, page 322:
      ‘I asked him once if he got nervous before doing it,’ says Astin, ‘and he said he was absolutely cacking himself before going on stage, but as soon as he got there it was fantastic.’
  2. (US, slang) To kill.
    “He tried to shoot me, so I cacked him.”
Synonyms

Noun

cack (plural cacks)

  1. An act of defecation.
  2. Excrement.
  3. Rubbish.
Synonyms
Derived terms

Etymology 3

Verb

cack (third-person singular simple present cacks, present participle cacking, simple past and past participle cacked)

  1. (Australian slang) To laugh.
    I had to cack when you fell down the stairs.
See also

Etymology 4

From cock.

Noun

cack (uncountable)

  1. (slang) penis.
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