释义 |
hack1 /hak/ transitive verb- To cut with rough blows
- To chop or mangle
- To notch
- To roughen with a hammer
- To kick
- To kick or strike the shins of (in some sports, illicitly)
- To cope with or bear (informal)
intransitive verb- To slash, chop
- To cough
- To use a computer with great skill
- To gain unauthorized access to other computers (often with into)
noun- An act of hacking
- A gash (archaic)
- A notch
- A chap in the skin (archaic)
- A kick on the shin (archaic)
- A mattock or pick
ORIGIN: Assumed OE haccian, found in combined form tō-haccian; cf Du hakken, Ger hacken hackˈable adjective (of a computer, program, phone etc) vulnerable to hacking hackˈer noun - A person who hacks
- A skilled and enthusiastic computer operator, esp an amateur or a producer of poor-quality computer code (informal)
- Now usu an operator who uses his or her skill to break into commercial or government computer or other electronic systems (informal)
hackˈery noun (informal) Computer hacking hackˈing noun adjective Short and interrupted, used eg of a broken, troublesome cough hackˈ-log noun A chopping-block hackˈsaw noun A saw for metals intransitive verb (pat hackˈsawed; pap hackˈsawed or (usu) hackˈsawn) To cut with a hacksaw hack someone off (informal) To make someone thoroughly fed up, disgusted hack2 /hak/ noun- A horse (or formerly, and still in the USA, a vehicle) kept for hire, esp one in a sorry condition
- An ordinary riding horse
- A ride on horseback
- Any person overworked on hire
- A literary or journalistic drudge
- Anything hackneyed (obsolete)
adjective- Hired
- Mercenary
- Mediocre
- Hackneyed
transitive verb- To make a hack of
- To use as a hack
- To hackney
- To hire out (a horse)
- To ride (a horse) in the countryside for recreation
intransitive verb- To work as a hack
- To journey on horseback
- To ride on horseback in the countryside for recreation
ORIGIN: hackney hacketteˈ noun (slang) A woman journalist hackˈing noun hacking jacket or hacking coat noun A waisted jacket with slits in the skirt and flapped pockets on a slant hackˈwork noun - Literary drudgery for publishers
- Literary work of poor quality produced to order
hack3 /hak/ noun- A grating or rack, eg for feeding cattle
- A rack on which food is placed for a hawk
- A bank for drying bricks
ORIGIN: OE hæce, hæc grating, hatch; cf hatch1 and heck2 hack4 /hak/ (Shakespeare) intransitive verb A word of unknown meaning but possibly meaning to take to the highway (or the street), or to have spurs hacked off |