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单词 ruck
释义

ruckn.1

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Forms:

α. Middle English ruke, Middle English–1500s (1900s historical) roke, 1500s–1600s rooke, 1500s–1600s rowke; English regional (northern and midlands) 1800s rook, 1800s– rooak (Yorkshire), 1800s– rouk, 1900s– roak (Lincolnshire); Scottish pre-1700 rook, pre-1700 rowik, pre-1700 rowk, pre-1700 rowke, pre-1700 ruick, pre-1700 ruik, pre-1700 ruke, pre-1700 rwik, pre-1700 1800s rouk.

β. Middle English ruch, Middle English– ruck, 1500s (1800s English regional) ruk, 1500s–1700s rucke; Scottish pre-1700 rucke, pre-1700 ruk, pre-1700 rwk, pre-1700 1700s– ruck.

Origin: A borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: < early Scandinavian (compare Icelandic hrúka (17th cent.), Norwegian ruke , Swedish regional ruka , all in sense ‘heap, stack’) < an ablaut variant (zero-grade) of the Germanic base of rick n.1, apparently with secondary lengthening. Compare earlier rick n.1As the name of a unit of measurement (sense 1b) sometimes with unmarked plural.
1.
a. A heap or stack of combustible material, esp. when to be used as fuel. Frequently with of. Now rare.In later quots. probably a contextual use of sense 3b.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > [noun] > a heap or stack
ruck?c1225
pyre1638
fire1792
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 159 Þe ȝiscere is his [sc. the devil's] eskebach..stureð him to rukelem ham to gedere..monie ruken [a1250 Titus rukes; a1400 Pepys hepes].
1527 Wigtown Burgh Court Rec. f. 204v Afens one tua ruckis of pettis.
1549 M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. Jas. iii. f. xxxiiii Like as a litel fyre is mingled with a greate rooke of fewell, so that by lytel and litell it setteth al the whole rooke on fyre.
1556 J. Olde tr. R. Gwalther Antichrist f. 177 The hole beast..is cast in to the burnyng streame or burnyng rooke of fyre.
1621 Sc. Acts Jas. VI (1814) IV. 628 That they nor nane of thame..keip any stakis, or Rukkes of haither, broome, Quhynnes, or vther fewall, within anye of the Closses.
1839 G. C. Lewis Gloss. Words Herefordshire 88Rucks of mawn’, heaps of peat.
1903 Trans. Inst. Mining Engin. 22 108 As the blackband ironstone contains a considerable amount of carbonaceous matter, little or no fuel is added to the ruck.
b. A particular measure or quantity of coal (see quot. 1611). historical and rare after 17th cent.In quot. 1295: a measure of resin.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] > measure of coal
ruck1295
butteresse1632
room1798
1295 Accts. Exchequer King's Remembrancer 5/7 In xvij Ruch' de Rosyn emptis..precium Ruch', x d.
1483 in W. H. Stevenson Rec. Borough Nottingham (1883) II. 421 (MED) [Every wain-load containing a whole] roke [of coals of Selston Pitte].
1486 in W. H. Stevenson Rec. Borough Nottingham (1885) III. 257 For half a roke of colys to brenne þe seid plaster with.
1546 in J. M. Bestall & D. V. Fowkes Chesterfield Wills & Inventories 1521–1603 (1977) 29 5 roke of collys..a loode of kydys.
1611 in Hist. MSS Comm.: MSS Duke of Rutland (1905) IV. 484 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 2606) LXIII. 301 A rooke of colles ought to bee ij yeardes high and a yeard and quarter square by measure.
1651 Publ. Gen. Acts 1326 Such..of the said Coals as have been, or usually are sold by the Stack, Ruck, Fathom, or other uncertain Denomination.
1813 Gentleman's Mag. Aug. 113/2 At another pit, a ruck was stated to be eight draughts, i. e. eight times the quantity contained in the utensil or vessel in which the coal is raised from the pits.
1907 Victoria Hist. County Derby II. 351/2 In 1450 certain lands at Codnor were exchanged subject to the condition that one of the parties should receive yearly three roke of coal if any ‘myne of cole’ were got.
2. Chiefly Scottish, English regional (northern), and Irish English. A rick or stack of hay, corn, etc.; (formerly also) †a stook of sheaves (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > cultivation of plants or crops > storage or preservation of crops > [noun] > stacking or ricking > stack or rick
moweOE
rickeOE
pease-ricka1325
stackc1330
tassc1330
rucka1382
hayrick14..
haystack14..
sedge reekc1440
hay-mow1483
hay-goaf1570
rack1574
hovel1591
scroo1604
mow-stack1611
sow1659
corn-rick1669
bean-rick1677
barley-mow1714
pea rick1766
rickle1768
bike1771
stacklet1796
bean-stack1828
a1382 in W. Greenwell Bp. Hatfield's Surv. (1857) 254 (MED) Item, ij hominibus conductis tassantibus fenum infra curiam in ruckes, per iiij dies, 12 d.
1516 in W. C. Dickinson Sheriff Court Bk. Fife (1928) 27 Preuit that Thomas Flemyng..spoilȝeit..certane aitis extending to iij rukkis.
1570 in J. Raine Wills & Inventories N. Counties Eng. (1835) I. 341 In wheat in the staggarth ij ruckes by estymac'on Fiftye thraves.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Treseau, a shocke, stowke, halfe-thraue, rowke, or heape of sheaues in a corne-field.
1676 Processes Kirkcudbright Sheriff Court No. 219 Haveing ane ruk of win hay upon the watirsyd.
1725 A. Ramsay Gentle Shepherd i. ii. 13 The Spate may bear away Frae aff the Howms your dainty Rucks of Hay.
1773 R. Fergusson Poems 93 Our rucks fu' thick are stackit i' the yard.
1831 R. Shennan Tales, Songs, & Misc. Poems 76 Now twas like a ruck o' hay.
1871 W. Alexander Johnny Gibb vi. 43 Twa' 'r three aul' rucks to thrash oot.
1917 Kelso Chron. 9 Mar. 4 The ruck is thatched afresh every autumn.
1943 R. Millar Yank from Ulster 9 He went out with the shifter to bring in a ruck o' hay out of the wee medda.
2001 J. McGowan Echoes of Savage Land (2006) ii. 67 Seamus replenished the rucks as Pearse forked the sheaves up to Benny and Enda, who fed them into the churning mouth of the thresher.
3.
a. A large number or quantity of people or things; a crowd; a mass.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > large or numerous
legiona1325
rout?c1335
multitudec1350
thrave1377
cloudc1384
schoola1450
meiniec1450
throng1538
ruckc1540
multitudine1547
swarm1548
regiment1575
armya1586
volley1595
pile1596
battalion1603
wood1608
host1613
armada1622
crowd1628
battalia1653
squadron1668
raffa1677
smytrie1786
raft1821
squash1884
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 7149 Thai gird into graves þe grettiest of astate..All the Remnond and Roke radly þai broght And brent vp the bodies vnto bare askis.
1601 J. Marston et al. Iacke Drums Entertainm. iii. sig. F2 Rucks of rich Pearle, and sparkling Diamonds Shall fringe thy garments with Imbroadry.
1700 G. Booth tr. Diodorus Siculus Hist. Libr. xx. iii. 67 Kill'd some upon their first Entrance, and drave all the rest in rucks one upon another, and flung them over-board.
1846 A. Smith Christopher Tadpole (1848) ii. 29 Finishing with a ruck of figures all at once.
1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 11 Aug. 4/2 There is a ruck of ambitious Gambettists in the prime of life.
1910 H. S. Johnson Williams on Service xi. 132 Bob launched his body into the ruck of them.
1946 K. Feiling Life N. Chamberlain i. ii. 10 He found himself with a ruck of smaller boys.
1992 E. Pearce Election Rides iii. 21 Had she opted sensibly for the Liberal Democrats, she would have had a party machine and a ruck of colleagues.
b. A heap or pile of anything. Frequently in in (also of) a ruck: in an untidy heap or tangle. Chiefly Scottish and English regional (northern) in later use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > mass formed by collection of particles > an accumulation > heap or pile
heapc725
cockeOE
hill1297
tassc1330
glub1382
mow?1424
bulkc1440
pile1440
pie1526
bing1528
borwen1570
ruck1601
rick1608
wreck1612
congest1625
castle1636
coacervation1650
congestion1664
cop1666
cumble1694
bin1695
toss1695
thurrock1708
rucklea1725
burrow1784
mound1788
wad1805
stook1865
boorach1868
barrow1869
sorites1871
tump1892
fid1926
clamp-
1601 J. Marston et al. Iacke Drums Entertainm. iv. sig. Gv So huge a Ruck Of heap'd vp fortunes.
1627 M. Drayton Battaile Agincourt 4 There in another Rucke Princes and Peasants lay together mixt.
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 312/1 They can neither Stand, Sit, Kneel, nor lie down, but be all in a ruck, or knit together.
1708 R. Morden & H. Moll Fifty Six Maps Great Brit. sig. C/3 By the Bishops ruck of stones.
1851 J. W. Haddock Somnolism & Psycheism (ed. 2) 199 I saw..clothes lying, folded carelessly. (‘In a ruck’—she said).
1865 B. Brierley Irkdale (1868) 47 Tumblin' 'em o' of a rook like an owd goods shop.
1870 E. Peacock Ralf Skirlaugh I. 130 He doesn't care two pence about the bit of a rouk o' cobble stones and sand.
1918 M. Symon Wir Roup 1 Wasties steed on gaird aside A ruck o' aul' lum hats.
2001 Birds Summer 84/2 When they [sc. plants] had strained every fibre and could get no closer to the sky, the whole collapsed in on itself in a resinous ruck.
c. Sport (chiefly Horse Racing). in a ruck: in a tight group; crowded together. Cf. sense 4a.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > horse racing > [adverb] > position on course
in a ruck1832
on the rails1886
1832 Sporting Mag. Nov. 8/2 A powerful field, no less than fifteen coursers, who were all in a ruck to within half a distance of the post.
1844 Amer. Turf. Reg. Nov. 687 McCabe came next, with Fowle, Stannard, Taylor, and Jackson, in a ruck behind him.
1879 J. S. Campion On Foot in Spain 47 They went by in a ruck, like a close Derby finish.
1915 ‘H. Payson’ Motor Cycle Chums through Hist. Amer. xxx. 284 For the first few yards the racers were bunched in a ruck. At the half mile they began to string out.
2002 Sportsman (Nexis) 22 Nov. 80 In the Peters they all finished in a ruck. The horses in the inside just couldn't go.
d. In footballing senses.
(a) Australian Rules Football. A group of three players (two ‘followers’ and a ‘rover’) who do not have fixed positions but follow the play. Also: = ruckman n. at Compounds.Recorded earliest in ruckman n. at Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > Australian football > [noun] > players or positions
goalkicker1871
full forward1880
rover1887
ruck1889
position player1900
centreline1911
1889 Argus (Melbourne) 1 July 7/7 The larger share of the work on both sides was done by the ruck men.
1893 Argus (Melbourne) 14 May 7/2 Tindall..was playing splendidly in the ruck for his side.
1931 J. F. McHale et al. Austral. Game of Football 64 The position of the ruck and rover when the umpire bounces the ball in the centre should not be a stereotyped one.
1967 Australian 17 Apr. 12 Terry Waters..was moved into the ruck in the third quarter.
1990 Hobart Mercury (Nexis) 21 July Positionally, he's an ‘I've been everywhere’ man... You name it—except for the ruck—he's played there.
2000 Canberra Sunday Times 11 June 88/6 I follow Essendon, my son [Joshua, ruck for the team] follows Essendon and they're doing fairly well.
(b) Rugby Union (originally New Zealand). A loose scrum formed around the person with the ball, at which one team attempts to drive play forward; (now) spec. such a scrum in which the ball is on the ground, and must not be handled by any of the players. Contrasted with maul n.1 5. Occasionally more fully loose ruck.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > rugby football > [noun] > scrum
scrimmage1848
squash1857
loose scrummage1874
scrum1876
tight1904
loose ruck1906
set scrum1925
scrum-down1943
1906 D. Gallaher & W. J. Stead Compl. Rugby Footballer ix. 134 What we call a loose ruck..represents the disordered state of things occurring, for example, when..a back has slipped and stopped the play when trying to block a forward rush. One man is down, and all his other colleagues in the back division are induced to come up to his assistance.
1912 Dominion (Wellington, N.Z.) 17 June 6/6 Nearing the line, A. Wilson shot out from the ruck and scored by the corner flag.
1956 V. Jenkins Lions Rampant xii. 180 On the muddy ground they made rush after rush, and piled into the loose rucks as if their lives depended on it.
1979 Times 12 Dec. 9/1 Oxford..won most of the rucks or mauls that mattered.
2007 Rugby World Mar. 157/2 They are also less strict if players come in at an angle, rather than ‘through the gate’ (ie, from the hindmost foot of the last player from their side bound into the ruck/maul).
4. the ruck.
a. Horse Racing (now chiefly Australian and New Zealand). The main body of horses following the race leader or leaders; the pack. Later also in other racing sports.In quot. 1884 in extended use, with reference to a group of attacking soldiers.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > horse racing > [noun] > horse by performance > collectively
the ruck1825
1825 Times 26 Sept. 2/5 Cleveland..ran about a quarter of a mile in the ruck, when he declined.
1862 London Society July 86/2 A length and a half separates Buckstone from The Marquis, Neptunus is fourth, The Knave fifth, Zetland sixth, and then come the ruck close together.
1884 ‘H. Collingwood’ Under Meteor Flag 180 Summers came panting in with the ruck, after all was over.
1904 Outing Nov. 176/1 As they swung into the stretch..one of the new men came up out of the ruck and ate up the lead and broke the tape a winner.
1959 M. Gee in Landfall June 131 A poor race, a run home in the ruck, would lengthen her price for the next start.
2000 Advertiser (Adelaide) (Nexis) 12 May 94 The race can be rough and because he has raced back in the ruck he either gets a direct check or the backwash of another.
b. Frequently depreciative. Chiefly with of. The ordinary, undistinguished majority of a group of people or things; the mass; the ‘common herd’. Also with modifying word. Cf. pack n.1 4.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [noun] > the generality
commona1382
commonalty1547
generality?1570
commonality1647
the ruck1847
1847 C. Thomson Autobiogr. Artisan vi. 163 It becomes a difficult matter to pick one out of the ruck.
1879 Contemp. Rev. 36 291 I write simply as one of that common ruck of ordinary practical working men.
1894 F. M. Elliot Rom. Gossip xii. 290 A great name, rising out of the feeble ruck of modern Italian sculpture.
1935 G. Blake Shipbuilders ii. 50 It had been a great experience, something that had lifted the day far out of the ruck of days.
1947 G. H. Scholefield Notable N.Z. Statesmen ix. 139 Only one of this ministry..was ever heard of again above the ruck.
2003 Independent 15 Jan. (Review section) 7/1 Some special, numinous quality..that marks them out from the ruck of humanity.
5. U.S. colloquial. Nonsense; rubbish; things of little value. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > absence of meaning > nonsense, rubbish > [noun]
magged talea1387
moonshine1468
trumperyc1485
foolishness1531
trash1542
baggage1545
flim-flam1570
gear1570
rubbisha1576
fiddle-faddle1577
stuff1579
fible-fable1581
balductum1593
pill1608
nonsense1612
skimble-skamble1619
porridge1642
mataeology1656
fiddle-come-faddle1663
apple sauce1672
balderdash1674
flummery1749
slang1762
all my eye1763
diddle-daddle1778
(all) my eye (and) Betty Martin1781
twaddle1782
blancmange1790
fudge1791
twiddle-twaddle1798
bothering1803
fee-faw-fum1811
slip-slop1811
nash-gab1816
flitter-tripe1822
effutiation1823
bladderdash1826
ráiméis1828
fiddlededee1843
pickles1846
rot1846
kelter1847
bosh1850
flummadiddle1850
poppycock1852
Barnum1856
fribble-frabble1859
kibosh1860
skittle1864
cod1866
Collyweston1867
punk1869
slush1869
stupidness1873
bilge-water1878
flapdoodle1878
tommyrot1880
ruck1882
piffle1884
flamdoodle1888
razzmatazz1888
balls1889
pop1890
narrischkeit1892
tosh1892
footle1894
tripe1895
crap1898
bunk1900
junk1906
quatsch1907
bilge1908
B.S.1912
bellywash1913
jazz1913
wash1913
bullshit?1915
kid-stakes1916
hokum1917
bollock1919
bullsh1919
bushwa1920
noise1920
bish-bosh1922
malarkey1923
posh1923
hooey1924
shit1924
heifer dust1927
madam1927
baloney1928
horse feathers1928
phonus-bolonus1929
rhubarb1929
spinach1929
toffeea1930
tomtit1930
hockey1931
phoney baloney1933
moody1934
cockalorum1936
cock1937
mess1937
waffle1937
berley1941
bull dust1943
crud1943
globaloney1943
hubba-hubba1944
pish1944
phooey1946
asswipe1947
chickenshit1947
slag1948
batshit1950
goop1950
slop1952
cack1954
doo-doo1954
cobbler1955
horse shit1955
nyamps1955
pony1956
horse manure1957
waffling1958
bird shit1959
codswallop1959
how's your father1959
dog shit1963
cods1965
shmegegge1968
pucky1970
taradiddle1970
mouthwash1971
wank1974
gobshite1977
mince1985
toss1990
arse1993
1882 Cent. Mag. Mar. 798/2 Precise and unimaginative moderns, who are apt to designate such collections as ‘hodge-podge’, ‘heterogeneous ruck’.
1885 ‘M. Twain’ Let. 11 Sept. (1917) II. xxv. 460 Flowers and general ruck sent to him by Tom, Dick, and Harry from everywhere.
1908 W. H. Low Chron. Friendships xv. 191 Pink cupids rolling around on pink clouds and that sort of ruck, the Boucher or Fragonard game.
1972 D. Mossman Stones of Summer iii. 363 But this is ruck! This is a sophomore's riddle!

Compounds

ruck ball n. Rugby Union play in or immediately following a ruck; (also) a ball played out of a ruck.
ΚΠ
1973 Times 11 Apr. 10/1 A beautiful drop goal off ruck ball.
1976 Scotsman 24 Dec. 16/4 The ruck ball was promptly knocked on by a centre.
2004 Rugby World Feb. 89/1 Although ruck ball is great ball and gets you going forward, you also have to be able to vary what you're doing.
ruckman n. Australian Rules Football either of the two followers in a ruck; (now) spec. the player who contests the ball-ups, and attempts to palm the ball down to the ruck-rover.
ΚΠ
1889Ruck men [see sense 3d(a)].
1959 D. Parnell & B. Andrew Austral. Football 37 Every ruckman is a ‘forward’ when his own side has the ball, and is a ‘backman’ when the opposing side has the ball.
2000 Australian 31 May (Brisbane ed.) 19/3 Peter Everitt's knee injury..will give back-up ruckman Tim Elliott the chance to regain his spot.
ruck-rover n. Australian Rules Football one of the followers in a ruck, whose specific task is to run on to the ball as palmed down by the ruckman at a ball-up.
ΚΠ
1963 L. Richards Boots & All! 90 By far the greater part of his success has been..in later years as a ruck-rover changing in the forward pocket.
2006 Q. Beresford Rob Riley iii. 65 Utilising his leg speed, he played ruck-rover or on the wing.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckn.2

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Forms: 1700s– ruck, 1800s wruck (English regional).
Origin: Probably a borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: Probably the reflex of a borrowing < early Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic hrukka , Norwegian (Nynorsk) rukke , and also (from a variant of the same base with i-mutation) Norwegian (Bokmål) rynke , Old Swedish rynkia (Swedish rynka ), Old Danish rynkiæ (Danish rynke ), all in the same sense) < the same Scandinavian base as Swedish runken crumpled, Old Danish runket (neuter) wrinkled (Danish runken ), originally past participles of the Scandinavian strong (Class III) verb reflected by Old Icelandic hrøkkva to retreat, recoil, (of hair) to curl, become curly (compare also the weak derivative reflected by Old Icelandic hrøkkva to cause to retreat or recoil, to coil (something), Norwegian (Nynorsk) rykkja , Old Swedish rynkia (Swedish rynka ), Danish rynke , all in sense ‘to crease, wrinkle’), ultimately < the same Indo-European base as shrink v. Earlier currency may be implied by rucked adj.1 Compare also earlier ruck v.4 and ruckle v.2 Compare also earlier runkle n.
A crease, wrinkle, or ridge, esp. in fabric; (also) a fold, a pleat. Also figurative. all in a ruck (English regional): full of creases; rucked up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > corrugation > [noun] > wrinkled condition > wrinkle or crease
rimpleeOE
frouncec1374
runklea1400
wrinklea1420
ruge?a1425
crimple1440
wreathc1440
wrimple1499
rumple?a1513
scrumple?a1513
wimple1513
crease1578
bag1587
crinkle1596
pucker1598
press1601
crumple1607
creasing1665
ruck1774
cramp1828
fold1840
ruckle1853
bumfle1867
1774 E. Capell Notes & Var. Readings Shakespeare Gloss. at Down-gyred Hanging in Rucks or Folds.
1787 F. Grose Provinc. Gloss. Your gown fits all in a ruck.
1863 Q. Rev. July 97 He observed there also a number of large transverse ridges or rucks of the glacier.
1876 T. Bryant Pract. Surg. (ed. 2) I. i. 36 Close attention should be paid to keep the bed smooth and the sheets free from rucks.
1879 G. F. Jackson Shropshire Word-bk. 357 The poor child's clo'es bin all in a ruck from maulin' it about.
1920 E. E. Fournier d'Albe tr. A. Schrenck-Notzing Phenomena of Materialisation 329 A widely expanded membrane, provided with fringes and rucks, and resembling in appearance a net.
a1953 D. Thomas Under Milk Wood (1954) 50 That milkmaid whispering water with no ruck or ripple.
1991 A. Blair More Tea at Miss Cranston's x. 117 My mother stood for hours with a goffering iron to get the rucks just right.
1992 A. Thorpe Ulverton iv. 94 I shuffle my chair from a ruck of the carpet.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckn.3

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Origin: Of uncertain origin.
Etymology: Origin uncertain.Compare the explanation given in quot. 1792, apparently associating the word with French ruche beehive (see ruche n.), although this poses phonological problems and may be a folk-etymological interpretation. Perhaps compare instead ruck n.1
Scots Law. historical. Now rare.
A flourish (flourish n. 4b), monogram (monogram n.3 1), etc., used by a notary to distinguish his work and prevent forgery; = paraph n. 3. Cf. rubric n. 4.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > personal identification > signature > [noun] > flourish
paraph1584
rubric1612
ruck1792
1792 W. Ross Lect. Pract. Law Scotl. II. 189 Each notary had a sign peculiar to himself; which was at first a flourish of penmanship, called a paraph, or a ruck, from its resemblance to bee hives.
1855 W. G. Dickson Treat. Law Evid. Scotl. II. 600 At first the notary attested his instruments by his seal, and afterwards by his initials in a cypher—called also a monogram, paraph, or ruck—which latterly became a fanciful signature surrounded by a motto.
1953 Trans. Jewish Hist. Soc. 17 114 It became customary to add an additional complicated flourish to the signature, and this latter has been termed variously a ‘ruck’, a ‘paraph’, and a ‘rubric’.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckn.4

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Forms: 1800s– rouk (Welsh English), 1800s– ruck.
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown. Compare earlier rut n.2
Chiefly English regional and U.S. regional.
A rut in a road. Also figurative. Frequently as the second element in compounds.Recorded earliest in cart-ruck n. at cart n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > road > [noun] > for wheeled vehicles > for carts > rut in
wheel-spurc1440
cart-spur1483
fossea1500
slough1532
wheel-track1552
wheel-rut1598
cart-rut1601
wheel-tread1735
cart-ruck1820
ruck1820
cart-track1824
1820 C. Lamb in London Mag. Oct. 365/2 The..quill, that has plodded..among the cart-rucks of figures and cyphers.
1839 G. C. Lewis Gloss. Words Herefordshire 88 Ruck, a rut of a road.
1858 Zoologist 16 5941 Deep, dirty ditches or rucks.
1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) I zeed the stoat urn 'long the wheel-ruck.
1899 B. W. Green Word-bk. Virginia Folk-speech 310 The road is full of rucks.
1941 P. White Diary 23 May (1994) ii. 45 But here I sit in the midst of it, in the desert, in the ruck of self-pity.
2001 J. Wilson Dark Clue 84 The horse..missed its footing, and..dropped one of our wheels into a deep ruck.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckn.5

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Origin: Either (i) formed within English, by conversion. Or (ii) a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Or (iii) formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymons: ruck v.5; rook n.3; ruckus n.; ruction n.
Etymology: Either < ruck v.5, or a variant of rook n.3, or shortened < either ruckus n. or ruction n.Perhaps compare also English regional (Kent) ruckle struggle (1736).
British colloquial.
A quarrel, a row; (later also) a fight, a brawl, esp. between groups of people.In the sense ‘brawl’, perhaps influenced by ruck n.1 3d(b).
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > quarrel or quarrelling > [noun] > a quarrel
controversy1448
tencion?1473
brulyie1531
pique1532
feudc1565
quarrel1566
jar1583
controverse1596
brack1600
outcast1620
rixation1623
controversarya1635
simultya1637
outfall1647
outfallingc1650
controversion1658
démêlé1661
embroilment1667
strut1677
risse1684
rubber1688
fray1702
brulyiement1718
fallout1725
tossa1732
embroil1742
ding-dong?1760
pilget1777
fratch1805
spar1836
splutter1838
bust-up1842
whid1847
chip1854
kass-kass1873
wap1887
run-in1894
go-round1898
blue1943
hassle1945
square-up?1949
ruck1958
1958 F. Norman Bang to Rights i. 15 I didn't feel like having a ruck about this.
1976 ‘P. B. Yuill’ Hazell & Menacing Jester vi. 66 I heard him and her having a ruck about Nicholas, that's all.
1984 Sounds 29 Dec. 14/2 Punks are a poor bet too (they'll..start rucks).
1991 Twenty Twenty Spring 55/1 Old-style football terrace sheets listed famous rucks.
2005 J. Brand It's Different for Girls iii. 37 All their arguments about education were ultimately futile... Still, the couple liked nothing better than a good ruck.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckv.1

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Forms:

α. early Middle English ruki (west midlands), Middle English roke, Middle English ruke, Middle English–1500s rouke, Middle English–1500s rowke, 1500s–1800s rook.

β. Middle English rokke, Middle English rukke, Middle English–1600s rucke, late Middle English rauke, 1500s– ruck.

γ. English regional (south-western) 1700s ruckee, 1800s ruckey, 1800s– rucky.

Origin: Probably a borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: Probably < early Scandinavian (compare Norwegian (Nynorsk) ruka to squat, crouch, Old Swedish ruka to squat, crouch, Danish ruge to brood, sit on eggs, hatch) < the Scandinavian base of Norwegian ruke ruck n.1
Now rare (English regional in later use).
intransitive. To squat, crouch; to cower; to huddle together. Also with down, together, and other adverbs. Formerly also †figurative. Formerly also †transitive (reflexive) in same sense.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > posture > action of crouching or squatting > crouch or squat [verb (intransitive)]
ruck?c1225
cowerc1300
crouchc1394
couch?a1400
hurklea1400
quatc1425
squat1573
squat1609
thigh1611
swat1615
hunker1720
lower1720
squattle1786
croodle1788
scrooch1844
the world > space > relative position > posture > action of crouching or squatting > crouch or squat [verb (reflexive)]
squata1425
squata1535
ruck1595
squab1680
α.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 195 For hwil ha stont up richt. ne mei he nouðer up on hire ne ruken [c1230 Corpus rukin, a1250 Titus ruki] ne riden.
c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 450 What is man kynde moore vn to yow holde Than is the sheep þt rowketh [v.r. rokiþ, roukeþ, rukketh, rokketh, rauketh; ligeth] in the folde.
a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) l. 6765 (MED) Þai sal for threst þe hevedes souke Of þe nedders þat on þam sal rouke Als a childe þat sittes in þe moder lappe.
c1450 tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Lyfe Manhode (Cambr.) (1869) 156 (MED) In the kichene thei wolden rouken [Fr. lroupir] an hol day gladliche for to roste a smal hastelet.
a1500 (?c1440) J. Lydgate Horse, Goose & Sheep (Lansd.) l. 439 in Minor Poems (1934) ii. 557 This Sheep rukyng in his fold, Set litill stoor of swerd or arwis keene.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions i. v. 51 In the easemente of vrine, the men rowked doune, the women stoode vprighte.
1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis Ded. sig. Aiijv As I can not deuine vpon such bookes, that happlye rouke in studentes mewes.
1595 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 v. vi. 47 The Rauen rookt her on the Chimnies top, And chattering Pies in dismall discord sung.
1743 R. Blair Grave 5 Night's foul Bird Rook'd in the Spire screams loud.
1864 G. S. Phillips Gypsies of Dane's Dike xvii. 137 The monks rooked together an' prayed afore go'den candlesticks.
1879 G. F. Jackson Shropshire Word-bk. (at cited word) They wun thick enough o' the groun' afore, an' now Jack's comenan' brought 'is wife an' two childern, so they bin farly rooked up.
β. a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iv. 1669 (MED) Bot now thei rucken in here nest And resten as hem liketh best. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 439 Rukkun, or cowre down, incurvo.a1500 (?c1440) J. Lydgate Horse, Goose & Sheep (Lansd.) l. 569 in Minor Poems (1934) ii. 563 (MED) The Woolff in ffoldis to Sheep doth duresse, Rukkyng in ffoldis for dreed.1573 G. Harvey Schollers Loove in Let.-bk. (1884) 118 Here ruckes my mistrisse makinge cleene the pan.1583 A. Golding tr. J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie xxiii. 136 Now their wit styeth not high but rather rucketh beneath vpon the ground.1619 E. Bert Approved Treat. Hawkes 56 Sometimes he..will..stop of his forefeet, without either rucking behinde, or aduancing before.1706 J. Stevens New Spanish Dict. i. at Gacho Swatting down, or bowing together, as a Man when he goes to steal a shot at a Fowl, rucking together.1820 R. Wilbraham Attempt Gloss. Cheshire Ruck, to get close or huddle together as fowls do.1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) Her ruckéd-down so low's her could, but I zeed the back o' her.1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 250/1 She war ruckin' aneãn the winder-sill in theer indoors.γ. 1746 Exmoor Scolding (ed. 3) ii. 9 But thee, thee wut ruckee..in the Chimly Coander.1842 G. P. R. Pulman Rustic Sketches 41 Ee'd grasp th' rod..An' ruckey down quite low.1901 ‘Zack’ White Cottage iv. 45 ‘In there,’ he said, pointing at the little white-washed cottage, ‘ruckying behind some bed, was the murderer.’
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckv.2

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Forms: see ruck n.1
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: ruck n.1
Etymology: < ruck n.1 Compare Norwegian regional ruka to heap, to stack. With sense 2 compare earlier ruck n.1 3d.
1. transitive. Chiefly Scottish and English regional (northern). To heap or pile up; to stack (a crop), esp. to dry (cf. ruck n.1 2). Also with together, up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > gather together [verb (transitive)] > gather in one mass or form lumps > accumulate > heap or pile up
heapc1000
ruck?c1225
ruckle?c1225
givelc1300
upheap1469
binga1522
pilec1540
copa1552
bank1577
hill1581
plet1584
conglomerate1596
acervate1623
coacervate1623
tilea1643
aggest1655
coacerve1660
pyramida1666
aggerate1693
big1716
bepilea1726
clamp1742
bulk1822
pang1898
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 297 Þus þu schalt..Ruke [c1230 Corpus Cambr. rukelin; a1400 Pepys reclen] onhis heaued bearninde gleden.
1607 in R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. (1833) II. 531 Cuming to the feildis quhair the saidis peise war roukit.
a1669 Skene Agric. MS in Agric. Hist. Rev. (1963) 11 67 Ten or twelf days after they [sc. peas] be shorne they must be rowkitt four or fyve dayes before they be stackitt in the barne yairde.
1720 A. Ramsay Wealth (new ed.) 6 When Autumns Stores are ruck'd up in the Yard.
1744 Session Papers in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. (at cited word) [He] past by the Deponent and a Neighbour Servant, as they were rucking Pease.
1844 Farmer's Mag. Feb. 123/2 Clover should be rucked, but..it should be half-dry prior to the operation.
1868 J. C. Atkinson Gloss. Cleveland Dial. 414 Gan an' rook thae to'v's [= turves].
1879 Jrnl. Physiol. 2 224 The other legs are rucked together in confusion just as all five pairs are.
1922 C. B. Kelland Catty Atkins Sailorman xvi. 166 We..shifted cases and rucked them away cautious and piled them in a tier.
1994 D. Murphy-Gibb in J. Matthews Within Hollow Hills 300 We rucked the hay, my brother twisting ropes..and myself bouncing on top of the rucks.
2.
a. intransitive. Rugby Union. To form a loose scrum around the player with the ball; (now) spec. to form a scrum in which the ball is on the ground and cannot be handled. Contrasted with maul v.1 8b. Cf. ruck n.1 3d(b).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > rugby football > play rugby football [verb (intransitive)] > actions or manoeuvres
pack1874
heel1884
scrum1890
goal1900
drop1905
to give (or sell) the (or a) dummy1907
ruck1910
jinka1914
to drop out1917
fly-kick1930
scissor1935
quick-heel1936
short-punt1937
touch-kick1954
grubber-kick1958
peel1960
corner-flag1962
to chip and chase1970
box kick1977
1910 Sydney Morning Herald 30 May 7/8 Back they came, the forwards rucking splendidly, and getting the ball from the scrum nearly every time.
1938 Dominion (Wellington, N.Z.) 20 June 13/1 All through the spell they used their weight and rucked with determination.
1968 Sunday Times 25 Feb. 23/2 Yet he rucks with the best, and one's memory will long cherish the sight of him defying three Harlequin forwards who were trying to wrest the ball from him.
1982 B. Beaumont Thanks to Rugby iii. 35 Someone who..relished tackling, falling on the ball, rucking and mauling and all the other chores of a rugby forward.
2007 Mercury (S. Afr.) (Nexis) 11 July (Sport section) 24 Lock Johann Muller..took control of the pack as they scrummed and rucked in the freezing mud and slush of the rugby field.
b. intransitive. Australian Rules Football. To play as a ruckman (ruckman n. at ruck n.1 Compounds).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > Australian football > [verb (intransitive)] > actions or manoeuvres
handball1886
handpass1931
ruck1934
1934 Argus (Melbourne) 16 Apr. 13/5 Warden appeared to be in good condition and rucked with vigour.
1963 Footy Fan (Melbourne) 1 vii. 21 When he rucked with Bill Morris, he always feared he might spoil Morris' leaps for the ball and more or less played the role of understudy.
1995 Sunday Tasmanian (Nexis) 16 July Rhys-Jones admitted the McLean move was a gamble, especially as Proctor had rucked so well early in the game.
2010 Northern Territory News (Austral.) (Nexis) 5 Mar. (Sports section) 51 Mark Berts (Palmerston): A workhorse big man who can ruck, fill a key defensive role or pop up in front of goals.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckv.3

Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin ructāre.
Etymology: < classical Latin ructāre (see ruct v.). Compare later ruct v., and earlier rout v.8
Obsolete. rare.
intransitive. To belch. Also transitive (with forth). Cf. ruct v.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > action of breaking wind > break wind [verb (intransitive)] > belch
rospa1333
bolka1387
rift?c1475
belcha1500
reboke?1499
yeska1522
rout1522
bleach1557
ruck1568
rasp1587
ruct1620
eruct1755
eructate1774
gurk1923
burp1932
bubble1940
1568 ( D. Lindsay Satyre (Bannatyne) l. 1435 in Wks. (1931) II. 382 Scho riftit, ruckit, and maid sic stendis.
1624 F. Quarles Iob Militant sig. O3 His Belching rucks forth flames.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

ruckv.4

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Origin: Probably a borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: Probably the reflex of a borrowing < early Scandinavian (compare Norwegian rukke to crease, wrinkle) < the same Scandinavian base as Old Icelandic hrukka ruck n.2; alternatively, perhaps < ruck n.2, although this is first attested later. Earlier currency is probably implied by ruckle v.2 and perhaps also by rucked adj.1
1.
a. transitive. To crease or wrinkle (fabric, clothing, etc.); to cause to form untidy folds or ridges. Frequently with up.figurative in quot. 1706.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > corrugation > corrugate [verb (transitive)] > wrinkle or crease
frounce1390
frumple1398
crunklec1400
plighta1425
crinklec1430
crimple1440
rimple1440
rivel1543
wrinkle1543
crease1588
shrivel1609
befrumple1611
frowze1611
wrimple1611
pucker1616
furl1689
ruck1706
runkle1720
crink1821
furrow1853
crumple1858
ruckle1866
bumfle1911
1706 J. Stevens New Spanish Dict. i. at Ovillo To ruck ones self up all together like a bottom of thread.
1796 J. Lawrence Philos. & Pract. Treat. Horses I. v. 268 See that your curb is right, that your reins are not twisted..that the pad be not rucked up.
1860 G. J. Whyte-Melville Market Harborough iii Mr. Sawyer..lost his flat shooting-hat, and rucked his plaid trousers up to his knees.
1876 R. Broughton Joan I. i. i. 7 An arm-chair..not at all rucked up or disarranged.
1912 J. B. Roberts Surg. Deformities of Face ii. 20 Shortening of the [muscular] fibers rucks the skin up into folds.
1964 F. Leiber Wanderer iii. 25 Hey, don't ruck up my skirt.
2006 Sporting Gun Dec. 71/1 A dog often tends to ruck-up this type of blanket bedding.
b. intransitive. Esp. of fabric or clothing: to work up into untidy folds or ridges; to become creased or wrinkled; to ‘ride up’. Chiefly with up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > corrugation > become corrugated [verb (intransitive)] > become wrinkled
rivelOE
snurpc1300
runklea1425
crumple?c1450
wrinkle1528
purse1597
pucker1598
crinklea1600
crimple1600
rumple1622
ruckle1695
ruck1758
crunkle1825
pocket1873
crease1876
full1889
concertina1918
furrow1961
1758 Gentleman's Mag. June 259 The belt will be kept from rucking up in folds.
1812 Monthly Mag. 34 234 The motion of walking soon occasioned it to slip from its place, to ruck.
1842 Fraser's Mag. 26 544 The sleeves ruck up and present his white, soft, and dimpled arms.
1888 C. T. Jacobi Printers' Vocab. 116 Ruck, a sheet is said to ‘ruck’ when it gets creased or doubled in laying on.
1935 Notes & Queries 4 May 314/1 A..flexible electric cord, which is guaranteed not to ravel or ruck up when in use.
1974 G. Deshpande tr. J. Dalvi Chakra i. 40 The vest had rucked up, showing the large, round hole of his navel.
1995 D. R. Koontz Intensity (2000) ii. 50 The oval rug rucked beneath her feet, twisted, and nearly spun out from under her.
2. transitive. Chiefly Fashion. To draw or gather into small folds or pleats; to ruche. Usually in passive.
ΚΠ
1807 Weekly Entertainer 12 Oct. 808 A long sleeve rucked, with full top.
1896 Westm. Gaz. 16 June 9/1 The sleeves rucked and puffed in yet another new way.
1906 D. C. Calthrop Eng. Costume (1907) 254 These laces pulled more tightly together, thus rucking the material into closer gathers, caused the cut of the shirt to be altered.
1927 H. Norris Medieval Costume & Fashion i. 44 They fitted loosely, and had close sleeves rucked at the wrists.
2000 Southland (N.Z.) Times (Nexis) 1 Mar. 5 Organza rucked on the shoulder straps carried over to the back bodice.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckv.5

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Forms: 1800s rux, 1800s– ruck.
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown.With sense 2 perhaps compare earlier rook n.3, ruction n., and ruckus n., and later ruck n.5
British slang.
1. transitive (reflexive). To worry oneself; to fret. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > state of being upset or perturbed > worry > anxiety > make oneself anxious [verb (reflexive)]
vex?a1425
to fash one's thumb1786
ruck1874
1874 Belgravia Mag. Feb. 340 Paddy was never the man to ruck himself.
1888 R. Kipling Three Musketeers in Plain Tales from Hills 60 'E [was] too busy to rux 'isself about p'raids.
2. transitive. To criticize severely; to rebuke, reprimand, chide; (also) to nag.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > rebuke or reproof > rebuke or reprove [verb (transitive)] > severely
dressc1405
wipe1523
to take up1530
whip1530
to shake upa1556
trounce1607
castigatea1616
lasha1616
objurgate1616
thunderstrike1638
snub1672
drape1683
cut1737
rowa1798
score1812
to dress down1823
to pitch into ——1823
wig1829
to row (a person) up1838
to catch or get Jesse1839
slate1840
drop1853
to drop (down) to or on (to)1859
to give (a person) rats1862
to jump upon1868
to give (a person) fits1871
to give it to someone (pretty) stiff1880
lambaste1886
ruck1899
bollock1901
bawl1903
scrub1911
burn1914
to hang, draw, and quarter1930
to tear a strip off1940
to tear (someone) off a strip1940
brass1943
rocket1948
bitch1952
tee1955
fan-
1899 T. M. Ellis Three Cat's-eye Rings 93 Your dress is so slovenly that you would be ruxed by the examining officer.
1936 ‘G. Ingram’ Muffled Man i. 13 ‘Oh, all right,’ sulked Sonny. ‘You ain't going to “ruck” me, are you?’
1959 C. MacInnes Absolute Beginners i. 109 I saw I mustn't keep on rucking him, because, after all, this was a party.
1966 P. Willmott Adolescent Boys E. London vi. 112 The governor of my place is horrible... He rucks you if you take more than ten minutes for a quarter of an hour's job.
1993 G. F. Newman Law & Order (rev. ed.) 284 ‘Did she know how you got your living?’ Lynn shrugged. ‘She was always rucking me to quit.’
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckv.6

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown. Perhaps compare English regional (Lincolnshire) ruck (also roock ) to gad about, to gossip (1847; compare also ruck-a-tongue a person who gossips, also a gossip (1888)), apparently an extended use of ruck (of a hen) to make the loud clucking noise associated with laying an egg (1847; probably originally the same word as ruck v.1).
British slang. Now rare.
1.
a. intransitive. To give information about a crime or a criminal to the police or a similar authority; to inform, ‘grass’. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1884 Times 22 Aug. 10/2 Miles had taken an oath that if one of the others ‘rucked’, or informed, ‘his light should be put out’.
1889 Session Paper Cent. Criminal Court, 1729–1913 CX. 871 He said ‘Has Cleasby rucked? If he has, I will b–y well kill him when I come out’—ruck means telling.
b. intransitive. To inform on a criminal.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against [verb (intransitive)]
inform1588
peach1598
whistle1599
sing1612
whiddlec1661
squeak1690
wheedle1710
whittle1735
to blow the gab1785
snitch1801
rat1810
nose1811
sing1816
gnarl1819
split1819
stag1839
clype1843
squeal1846
blow1848
to round on1857
nark1859
pimp1865
squawk1872
ruck1884
to come or turn copper1891
copper1897
sneak1897
cough1901
stool1911
tattle-tale1918
snout1923
talk1924
fink1925
scream1925
sarbut1928
grass1929
to turn over1967
dime1970
society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against [verb (transitive)]
wrayc725
meldeOE
bimeldena1300
forgabc1394
to blow up?a1400
outsay?a1400
detectc1449
denounce1485
ascry1523
inform1526
promote1550
peach1570
blow1575
impeach1617
wheedle1710
split1795
snitch1801
cheep1831
squeal1846
to put away1858
spot1864
report1869
squawk1872
nose1875
finger1877
ruck1884
to turn over1890
to gag on1891
shop1895
pool1907
run1909
peep1911
pot1911
copper1923
finger1929
rat1932
to blow the whistle on1934
grass1936
rat1969
to put in1975
turn1977
1884 Daily News 20 Sept. 2/2 I told the prisoner that I was not going to ruck on an old pal.
1898 J. D. Brayshaw Slum Silhouettes 207 Yer won't tell Mo that I told yer—will yer? If he knew as I'd rucked on him, he'd kill me.
1920 P. Green Our Kid 108 Kiddy Buckingham was narking (acting as a paid police spy) and rucked on 'em.
2. intransitive. Chiefly English regional (London). With on. To abandon or disown a person; to turn one's back on.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > reverse or abandon one's purpose or intention [verb (transitive)] > desert or deny a person
forsakea1300
refusec1350
nitec1390
swerve1390
relinquish1472
relinque1483
renounce1582
to fling off1587
derelicta1631
relapse1633
plant1743
to throw over1835
chuck up (the sponge)1878
ditch1899
ruck1903
to run out on1912
to walk out1921
squib1938
1903 A. M. Binstead Pitcher in Paradise iv. 96 Your worthy parent..isn't going to ruck on you in the golden autumn of his life, just because you were denied the keen commercial instincts that led him to make a pile!
1912 E. Lyttelton Peter's Chance ii. 52 I serpose I shall 'ave to take up with 'im again now yer've rucked on me!
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ruckv.7

Brit. /rʌk/, U.S. /rək/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: ruck n.5
Etymology: < ruck n.5
British colloquial.
intransitive. To have a ruck (ruck n.5); to fight, to brawl.
ΚΠ
1984 in J. Williams et al. Hooligans Abroad ii. vi. 156 The Argies they went to the Falklands They said that they wanted to ruck.
1996 D. Brimson & E. Brimson Everywhere we Go ix. 113 The reason that some people travel is that they get the chance to hurl abuse at (and possibly ruck with) supporters from other parts of England.
2006 Birmingham Evening Mail (Nexis) 1 July 46 The Robbie Savage lookalike wanted to ruck after Argentina lost on pens.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1?c1225n.21774n.31792n.41820n.51958v.1?c1225v.2?c1225v.31568v.41706v.51874v.61884v.71984
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