different between dack vs ack

dack

English

Etymology

From daks, Australian slang for trousers or underwear.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dæk/

Verb

dack (third-person singular simple present dacks, present participle dacking, simple past and past participle dacked)

  1. (Australia, informal) To pull down someone's trousers as a practical joke.

Translations

References

dack From the web:

  • what deck means
  • dack what does it mean
  • what did dack rambo die from
  • dark web
  • docker recipient
  • what happened dack rambo
  • deck up
  • what does deckle mean


ack

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /æk/

Etymology 1

Clipping of acknowledged.

Noun

ack (plural acks)

  1. (military, now historical) The letter A as used in signalling and other types of communications.
    • 1929, Frederic Manning, The Middle Parts of Fortune, Vintage 2014, p. 173:
      They had to begin at the beginning: learning the Morse code, flag-wagging, a succession of acks, and practice on the buzzer.
  2. (data communications) acknowledgment signal
Alternative forms
  • (data communications): ACK
Antonyms
  • (data communications): nack, nak
Derived terms
  • ack emma
  • ack-ack

Interjection

ack

  1. (radio communications) acknowledged

Etymology 2

Imitative.

Interjection

ack

  1. Expressing distaste, alarm, or trepidation.

Anagrams

  • AKC, cak

Swedish

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

From Old Swedish akh, from Middle Low German ach (an unhappy interjection).

Interjection

ack

  1. alas, oh (exclamation of sorrow, etc.)
See also
  • eja

Etymology 2

Clipping of ackumulator.

Noun

ack c

  1. (electronics, slang) an electric accumulator.
Declension
Synonyms
  • ackumulator

ack From the web:

  • what acknowledge means
  • what ack means
  • what ackee
  • what ack stands for
  • what ackee good for
  • what ackee leaf good for
  • what ackee taste like
  • what acknowledgement
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