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Definition of whack verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

whack

verb
 
/wæk/
 
/wæk/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they whack
 
/wæk/
 
/wæk/
he / she / it whacks
 
/wæks/
 
/wæks/
past simple whacked
 
/wækt/
 
/wækt/
past participle whacked
 
/wækt/
 
/wækt/
-ing form whacking
 
/ˈwækɪŋ/
 
/ˈwækɪŋ/
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  1. whack somebody/something (+ adv./prep.) (informal) to hit somebody/something very hard
    • She whacked him with her handbag.
    • James whacked the ball over the net.
    Extra Examples
    • He whacked the ball back over the net.
    • She whacked him around the head.
    • Some of the teachers used to whack the boys with a slipper.
  2. whack something + adv./prep. (informal) to put something somewhere without much care
    • Just whack your bags in the corner.
  3. whack somebody (North American English, slang) to murder somebody
  4. Word Originearly 18th cent.: imitative, or perhaps an alteration of thwack.
See whack in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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