释义 |
▪ I. sacker1|ˈsækə(r)| [f. sack v.2 + -er1.] One who sacks or plunders.
1589Rider Bibl. Schol., A sacker, populator, direptor. 1824J. Symmons tr. æschylus' Agam. 71 O sacker of Troy town divine! 1907A. Lang Hist. Scot. IV. xiv. 360 He made no effort to discourage the sackers of Shawfield's house. ▪ II. ˈsacker2 U.S. [f. sack v.1 6 + -er1.] One engaged in sacking logs.
1902S. E. White Blazed Trail lii. 360 It was noon. The sackers looked up in surprise. ▪ III. ˈsacker3 N. Amer. [sack n.1 1 i.] A baseman in baseball. (Usu. preceded by ordinal number indicating the base position.)
1914Lardner & Heeman Mar. 6, 1914 46 He once was the world's most famous first sacker. 1926Amer. Speech I. 369/2 Basemen are ‘sackers’. 1938H. E. West Baseball Scrap Bk. 158 Wally Pipp became the Yankee first sacker in 1915, and Lou Gehrig succeeded him ten years later and is still going strong. 1944College Topics (Univ. Virginia) 30 Mar. 3 Bob Bryon, first sacker from North Carolina State, seems assured of the first base position. 1958[see home-brew 2]. 1974Anderson (S. Carolina) Independent 22 Apr. 7a/1 As proof of his defensive prowess, Hargrove led the WCL first sackers in fielding with a .988 percentage. ▪ IV. sacker variant of saker. |