What is the meaning of RACK 2. Phrases containing RACK 2
See meanings and uses of RACK 2!Slangs & AI meanings
Sack race is London Cockney rhyming slang for face.
Tin tack is British rhyming slang for fact.Tin tack is British rhyming slang for dismissal from employment (sack).
Rack was formerly American slang (it's now conventional language) for a bed or bunk. Rack is slang for sleep.
(v.) to steal. Originally derived from "car-jack," although, now pertains to stealing anything. "Check out his new walkman...let's jack it!" 2. n. Another reference to a telephone. "I just got off the jack, waiting for him to call me back."Â
Sack (fired). He got the tin tack the other day.
Marijuana and crack
Female who trades sex for crack or money to buy crack; a person who uses rock cocaine
crack and marijuana
Geek rock is American slang for crack cocaine.
Double rock is slang for crack cocaine diluted with procaine.
n. refers to a woman's breasts. "Check out the rack on that one!"Â
Standing next to ya best mates, without notice you wack his scrotum really hard and yell out sack wack.
Rank is black American slang for insult; put someone down. Rank is American slang for to back out of a commitment. Rank is American slang for disgusting.
Straight and flat stretch of track upon which an engineer can safely make unusually high speed. Also parallel stretches of track of two competing railroads upon which rival trains race one another (contrary to company rules but much to the delight of enginemen, trainmen, and passengers, and perhaps to the secret delight of some officials)
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n.
A frame or grating of various kinds; as, a frame for drying bricks, fish, or cheese; a rack for feeding cattle; a grating in a mill race, etc.
n.
One who exacts rack-rent.
v. t.
To wash on a rack, as metals or ore.
v. t.
To move or lift, as a house, by means of a jack or jacks. See 2d Jack, n., 5.
n.
A heap; a rick.
n.
A thin, flying cloud; a rack.
v. t.
To put in a sack; to bag; as, to sack corn.
a.
A frame on which articles are deposited for keeping or arranged for display; as, a clothes rack; a bottle rack, etc.
v. t.
To rack; to torment.
superl.
Strong-scented; rancid; musty; as, oil of a rank smell; rank-smelling rue.
v. i.
To hunt game at night by means of a jack. See 2d Jack, n., 4, n.
v. i.
To make a back for; to furnish with a back; as, to back books.
v. i.
To bet on the success of; -- as, to back a race horse.
a.
Being at the back or in the rear; distant; remote; as, the back door; back settlements.
v. t.
To bear or carry in a sack upon the back or the shoulders.
v. i.
To write upon the back of; as, to back a letter; to indorse; as, to back a note or legal document.
n.
The common sort, whether persons or things; as, the ruck in a horse race.
a.
A piece or frame of wood, having several sheaves, through which the running rigging passes; -- called also rack block. Also, a frame to hold shot.
v. t.
To subject to rack-rent, as a farm or tenant.
n.
One who is subjected to paying rack-rent.
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