different between uck vs huck
uck
English
Interjection
uck
- Alternative spelling of yuck
Synonyms
- See Thesaurus:yuck
uck From the web:
- what's uckfield like to live in
- lucky means
- what ucku means
- uckfield what to do
- uckfield what tier
- uckers what does this mean
- what does ruckus mean
- what does uckfay ouyay mean
huck
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /h?k/
- Rhymes: -?k
Etymology 1
Unknown. Perhaps a variant of chuck or hoick.
Verb
huck (third-person singular simple present hucks, present participle hucking, simple past and past participle hucked)
- (transitive, informal) To throw or chuck.
- He was so angry that he hucked the book at my face.
- 2008, Stephen King, "A Very Tight Place"
- Mostly these portable toilets are just thin molded plastic […] But at construction sites, we sheet-metal the sides. Cladding, it's called. Otherwise, people come along and punch holes through them. […] Or kids will come along and huck rocks through the roofs, just to hear the sound it makes.
- To throw oneself off a large jump or drop.
- To throw one's body in the air, possibly in a way that is ungraceful or lacks skill.
- (transitive, Ultimate Frisbee) To throw a frisbee a long distance.
- (intransitive, Ultimate Frisbee) To make a long throw with the frisbee; to start a point by making such a throw.
- (mountain biking) To attempt a particularly big jump or drop, often haphazardly.
- A longer fork makes the bike more cumbersome, but you will be able to huck more stuff.
- If you huck it (the take-off), you'll drop about 20 feet.
- (mountain biking) To make a maneuver in a clumsy or poorly planned way.
- (transitive, whitewater kayaking) To paddle off a waterfall or to boof a big drop.
- I hucked a sweet 25-foot waterfall on the Tomata River.
Noun
huck (plural hucks)
- (Ultimate Frisbee) A long throw, generally at least half a field in length.
- (skiing, snowboarding) A drop or jump off a cliff or cornice.
Etymology 2
Backformation from huckle, or from Middle English hoke (“hook”); compare hokebone (“hip”).
Noun
huck (plural hucks)
- (dialect) A person's hip.
Related terms
- huckle
Etymology 3
From Middle English hukken, related to German höken (“to haggle; traffic”).
Verb
huck (third-person singular simple present hucks, present participle hucking, simple past and past participle hucked)
- (dated) To haggle in trading.
Anagrams
- HKCU
huck From the web:
- what huck finn called a stretcher
- what huckleberry means
- what huckleberry friend mean
- what huck calls his dad
- what's huckleberry finn about
- what's huck's real name
- what's hucknall like to live
- what's huckleberry pie
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