Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Food, especially coarse or inferior foodstuffs.
- noun A short, light nail with a sharp point and a flat head.
- noun A rope for holding down the weather clew of a course.
- noun A rope for hauling the outer lower corner of a studdingsail to the boom.
- noun The part of a sail, such as the weather clew of a course, to which this rope is fastened.
- noun The lower forward corner of a fore-and-aft sail.
- noun The position of a vessel relative to the trim of its sails.
- noun The act of changing from one position or direction to another.
- noun The distance or leg sailed between changes of position or direction.
- noun An approach to accomplishing a goal or a method of dealing with a problem.
- noun A large, loose stitch made as a temporary binding or as a marker.
- noun Stickiness, as that of a newly painted surface.
- intransitive verb To fasten or attach with a tack or tacks.
- intransitive verb To fasten or mark (cloth or a seam, for example) with a loose basting stitch.
- intransitive verb To put together loosely and arbitrarily.
- intransitive verb To add as an extra item; append.
- intransitive verb Nautical To bring (a vessel) into the wind in order to change course or direction.
- intransitive verb To change the direction of a sailing vessel, especially by turning the bow into and past the direction of the wind.
- intransitive verb To sail a zigzag course upwind by repeatedly executing such a maneuver.
- intransitive verb To change tack.
- intransitive verb To change one's course of action.
- noun The harness for a horse, including the bridle and saddle.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To attack.
- noun A variety of pistol used by the Highlanders of Scotland. See
dag , 2. - noun A distinctive taste or flavor; a continuing or abiding smack.
- noun Side: said of a speculator's relationship to the market.
- noun A spot; a stain; a blemish.
- noun A short, sharp-pointed nail or pin, used as a fastener by being driven or thrust-through the material to be fastened into the substance to which it is to be fixed.
- noun In needlework, a long stitch, usually one of a number intended to hold two pieces of stuff together, preparatory to more thorough sewing. Compare
basting . - noun Nautical: A heavy rope used to confine the foremost lower corner of the courses; also, a rope by which the outer lower corner of a studdingsail is pulled out to the end of the boom.
- noun The part of a sail to which the tack is fastened, the foremost lower corner of a course, jib, or staysail, or the outer lower corner of a studdingsail.
- noun Hence— The course of a ship in relation to the position of her sails: as, the starboard tack, or port tack (the former when she is close-hauled with the wind on her starboard, the latter when close-hauled with the wind on her port side).
- noun A temporary change of a few points in the direction of sailing, as to take advantage of a side wind; one of a series of movements of a vessel to starboard and port alternately out of the general line of her course.
- noun Hence A determinate course or change of course in general; a tactical line or turn of procedure; a mode of action or conduct adopted or pursued for some specific reason.
- noun In plumbing, the fastening of a pipe to a wall or the like, consisting of a strip of lead soldered to the pipe, nailed to the support, and turned back over the nails.
- noun Something that is attached or fixed in place, or that holds, adheres, or sticks.
- noun The condition of being tacked or fastened; stability; fixedness; firm grasp; reliance. See
to hold tack , below. - noun In the arts, an adhesive or sticky condition, as of a partially dried, varnished, painted, or oiled surface; stickiness.
- noun In Scots law, a contract by which the use of a thing is let for hire; a lease: as, a tack of land.
- noun Hence— Land occupied on lease; a rented farm.
- noun Hired pasturage; the renting of pasture for cattle.
- noun Substance; solidity: spoken of the food of cattle and other stock.
- noun Bad food.
- noun Bad malt liquor.
- noun Food in general; fare: as, hard tack, coarse fare; soft tack, good fare.
- noun Specifically, among sailors, soldiers, etc., bread, or anything of the bread kind, distinguished as hard tack (or hardtack) and soft tack. See
hardtack . - To fasten by tacks; join, attach, or secure by some slight or temporary fastening: as, to
tack down a carpet; to tack up a curtain; to tack a shoe to the last; to tack parts of a garment together with pins or by basting preparatory to sewing.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
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Examples
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"_Nej tack, nej tack_" (no thank you), she apparently understood and desisted.
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The reason for pursuing this tack is my belief that unless we firmly understand the force of events which has led us to the current pass, we are very unlikely to seize the present opportunity to rebuild a more certain and more prosperous future.
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That switch in tack is just because the growth rate argument failed, it doesn’t make sense factually.
Matthew Yglesias » The United States Has Always Been Rich 2010
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Yeah, the psuedo-outdoorsman tack is what prompted my remark in #99 about him being a pretty good candidate for the offspring of a “Red Green Show” doof.
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The much stronger tack is for Republicans to win the 2012 elections and repeal the bill in 2013, before the benefits start rolling in.
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Simply put, a tie tack is a short pin with an embellished head.
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Others may argue that the tie tack is too tiny to be worth wearing.
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This was a change in tack by the tax authorities, who had been arguing that Vodafone International -- a wholly owned unit of Vodafone Group PLC. -- was liable to be taxed as it had failed to withhold tax when it bought the 67% stake in Hutchison Essar from Hutchison Whampoa for $11.2 billion.
India Court Defers Vodafone Hearing Kenan Machado 2010
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A necktie without a tie tack is like potato chips without potatoes.
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Sometimes the back-side of the tack is rusty and has probably been there a year or more.
Get AWAY from me! 2009
oroboros commented on the word tack
directly as in tack (down) v. indirectly as tack into the wind.
April 26, 2008
tammanycall commented on the word tack
Public School Slang: A study feast.
April 14, 2009
ruzuzu commented on the word tack
The Oxford Dictionary of Word Histories tells me "The tack associated with horse-riding was originally dialect in the general sense 'apparatus, equipment' and is a contraction of tackle. The current sense (as in tack room) dates from the 1920s."
January 26, 2016
fbharjo commented on the word tack
What if one loses track of tack? Would that be a tacky situation? Would it be a task hard to tackle? (Did you grasp tack?)
What type of tack would you use on a tackey horse? If the tack wasn't to the tackey's liking would the horse become techy?
January 27, 2016