Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

jack

 
(jăk) pronunciation
n.
  1. often Jack Informal. A man; a fellow.
    1. One who does odd or heavy jobs; a laborer.
    2. One who works in a specified manual trade. Often used in combination: a lumberjack; a steeplejack.
    3. Jack A sailor; a tar.
  2. (Abbr. J) Games. A playing card showing the figure of a servant or soldier and ranking below a queen. Also called knave.
  3. Games.
    1. jacks (used with a sing. or pl. verb) A game played with a set of small six-pointed metal pieces and a small ball, the object being to pick up the pieces in various combinations.
    2. One of the metal pieces so used.
  4. Sports. A pin used in some games of bowling.
    1. A usually portable device for raising heavy objects by means of force applied with a lever, screw, or hydraulic press.
    2. A wooden wedge for cleaving rock.
  5. A device used for turning a spit.
  6. Nautical.
    1. A support or brace, especially the iron crosstree on a topgallant masthead.
    2. A small flag flown at the bow of a ship, usually to indicate nationality.
  7. The male of certain animals, especially the ass.
  8. Any of several food and game fishes of the family Carangidae, found in tropical and temperate seas.
  9. A jackrabbit.
  10. A socket that accepts a plug at one end and attaches to electric circuitry at the other.
  11. Slang. Money.
  12. Applejack.
  13. Slang. A small or worthless amount: You don't know jack about that.

v., jacked, jack·ing, jacks.

v.tr.
  1. To hunt or fish for with a jacklight: hunters illegally jacking deer.
    1. To move or hoist by or as if by using a jack: jacked the rear of the car to replace the tire.
    2. To raise (something) to a higher level, as in cost: "Foreign producers jacked up the price on some steels by over 100%" (Forbes).
  2. Baseball. To hit (a pitched ball) hard, especially for a home run.
v.intr.
To hunt or fish for quarry by using a jacklight.

phrasal verb:

jack off Vulgar Slang.

  1. To masturbate.

[From the name Jack, from Middle English Jakke, possibly from Old French Jacques, from Late Latin Iacōbus. See Jacob. N., sense 15, short for JACK SHIT.]

jacker jack'er n.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics

In practical mechanics, portable hand-operated device for raising heavy weights through short distances, exerting great pressures, or holding assembled work firmly in position. The ratio of the load to the amount of force applied to the handle can be made quite high by using a gear or screw to regulate the upward extension. A ratchet allows a heavy weight to be raised in short successive stages. Though limited by the requirements of portability and ease of manual operation, jacks may lift, or exert a force of, several tons. A familiar example is the automobile jack, used to raise one end of a car to change a tire.

For more information on jack, visit Britannica.com.

A socket, receptacle or port. The term is widely used in the telephony and audio/video worlds; for example, the Registered Jack-11 (RJ-11) is the common telephone wall outlet. Microphones plug into phono jacks on amplifiers. In networking, "port" is the preferred term as in "the switch has 24 RJ-45 ports." However, people coming from the telephony world might say "the switch has 24 RJ-45 jacks." See audio jack, RJ-11, RJ-45 and plugs & sockets.

Download Computer Desktop Encyclopedia to your PC, iPhone or Android.

A fish family of over 200 species, including pompano, amberjack bar jack, blue runner, crevalle jack, green jack, horse mackerel (not a true mackerel), rainbow runner, rudderfish, trevally, yellow jack and yellowtail. Although some jack species aren't particularly good to eat, many-particularly pompano-are considered excellent and have a rich, firm, delicately flavored flesh. Jacks are found around the world in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Pacific. See also fish.

noun

  1. A person engaged in sailing or working on a ship. jack-tar, mariner, navigator, sailor, sea dog, seafarer, seaman. Informal salt, tar. Slang gob3. See sea.
  2. Fabric used especially as a symbol: banderole, banner, banneret, color (used in plural), ensign, flag1, oriflamme, pennant, pennon, standard, streamer. See substitute.
  3. Something, such as coins or printed bills, used as a medium of exchange: cash, currency, lucre, money. Informal wampum. Slang bread, cabbage, dough, gelt, green, lettuce, long green, mazuma, moola, scratch. Chiefly British brass. See money.

verb

    To increase in amount. boost, hike, jump, raise, up. See increase/decrease.


v

Definition: raise, increase
Antonyms: lower


1. A portable machine, variously constructed for exerting great force for moving a heavy body through a short distance. Also see hydraulic jack; jackscrew.
2. An electrical receptacle into which a plug, 7 is inserted to make electrical contact between communication circuits.

jack, 2


jack, mechanical device used to multiply a relatively small applied force so that it can lift and support heavy loads, or sometimes, move massive objects into a desired position. The lever jack, often used in lifting automobiles, has a lever combined with a ratchet; the lever is used to lift the load a small distance and the ratchet prevents the load from falling back while the lever is reset so that the process can be repeated. In the screw jack the load is moved or lifted by the turning of a screw; the pitch of the screw threads is arranged so that friction is sufficient to hold the load in place when the torque applied to the screw is released. In yet another form of jack a hydraulic device is used. See hydraulic machine.


A flag at the bow of a ship or sometimes a sailor, from the Royal Navy term for sailor--Jack Tar. The Jack of a United States ship has a blue field and 50 white stars and is flown from the bow while in port. During courts martial or courts of inquiry on board the Jack is flown from the yardarm.

Jack or Jack radio
noun   US, informal a radio format in which a large number of songs are preprogrammed and then played in a random order, often with a recorded voice rather than a live presenter making brief remarks between songs [from 'Cadillac Jack' Garret, an imaginary radio personality invented in 2000 by US DJ Bob Perry, creator of the format ]
Unlike a typical radio station, which regularly plays 300 or 400 hits of a particular genre, programmers on Jack stations select 700 to 1,000 songs of completely different genres. Then, they sequence them to create what radio programmers call 'train wrecks' - Billy Idol will follow Bob Marley, Elvis after Guns N' Roses, and so on (Business Week)

Previous:ICE, Helengrad, Great Firewall
Next:Jafaican, jet-to-let, job-dumping

  1. jack
    noun, orig US

    1:
    A policeman or detective; a military policeman. (1889 —) .
    J. Wainwright These county coppers...couldn't get their minds unhooked from the words 'New Scotland Yard'—as if every jack in the Metropolitan Police District worked from there (1971).

    2:
    Money. (1890 —) .
    A. Prior I asked him...to think of the new suits he could get...when the jack came in (1960).

    3:
    I'm all right, Jack a saying typifying selfish complacency. (1910 —) .
    John & Humphry Right now it is, as I said before, dog eat dog....I'm all right, Jack, damn you (1971).

    4:
    on one's jack. Also on one's Jack Jones on one's own. (1925 —) . Cf. pat (malone) noun.
    A. Draper You're on your Jack Jones. Ben's deserted you (1972);
    R. Parkes I thought I could go sneaking in there all on my jack and bring out the evidence (1973).

    5:
    Five pounds; a five-pound note. Also jacks, jax. (1958 —) .
    Guardian 'That one,' says the dealer from Islington, 'that one we know she died in; so it'll cost you a jax.'...Five quid for a shroud; cheap at the price (1968).

    6:
    A tablet of heroin. (1967 —) .
    R. Busby He's been cranking up on horse [i.e. heroin]. His last jack is wearing off, and he's grovelling on the floor for another pill (1971). adjective

    7:
    Austral Fed up, disenchanted; usu. followed by of. (1889 —) .
    Australian Geographic 'The missus might get jack of it and clear out for the city,' observed one miner, 'but most of them come back' (1986). verb

    8:
    to jack off:
    a:
    To go away. (1935 —) .
    G. Orwell Flo and Charlie would probably 'jack off' if they got the chance of a lift (1935).

    b:
    To masturbate. (1959 —) .
    R. A. Carter You miserable little queer....You can jack off in Llewellyn's best hat for all I care (1971).


    9:
    to jack (something) up NZ To arrange, organize, fix up; to put right, spruce up. (1942 —) .
    New Zealand Listener I'll see you right at a boardin' place until you get jacked up (1971).

    10:
    to jack (something) in to stop doing (something), give up, leave off; esp. in phr. to jack it in. (1948 —) .
    K. Royce I'm beginning to wonder if it's worth it....Let me jack it in (1972).

    [In sense 4, from Jack Jones, rhyming slang for 'alone'; in sense 5, short for Jack's alive, obs. rhyming slang for 'five'; in sense 7, from to jack up to give up.]
  2. jack
    verb trans., orig and mainly US

    To take illegally, steal (esp. a car or something from a car); to rob, burgle. (1930 —) .
    J. Favreur Who would jack your fuckin K-car? (1994).

    [Shortening of hijack verb.]



Previous:Jumble, Johnson, Johnny Foreigner
Next:jack-leg, jackass brandy, jacksy

Fruit juices that have been fermented to produce alcoholic beverages.

Random House Word Menu:

categories related to 'jack'

Top
Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to jack, see:

  See crossword solutions for the clue Jack.

The name Jack is a pet name for John, or to a lesser extent Jacob, commonly so in the Northeastern United States. Jack may also refer to:

Myth/Folklore

  • Jack (hero), an archetypal trickster hero appearing in many folk tales, fairy tales, legends and literature.

Computers

Games

  • Jacks, six-tipped game pieces used in the game of the same name
  • Jack (playing card), the lowest face card in a deck of playing cards
  • Jack, a target ball used in games such as bowls

Films

Music

  • Jack (band), a British independent pop group signed to the Too Pure label
  • Jack (album), a 2010 studio album by John Farnham

Flags

  • A Navy Jack, a type of flag flown by warships
  • Union Jack, a.k.a. Union Flag, the flag of the United Kingdom

Plants

  • Jack (tree) (Mangifera caesia), a relative of the mango
  • Jackfruit, a species of tree native to the East Indies

Fish

Tools and devices

Connectors

Other uses

See also


Translations:

Jack

Top

Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - medhjælper, sømand, skovarbejder, knægt, donkraft
v. tr. - løfte, hæve
v. intr. - jage med blus

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    Vinteren står for døren
  • jack in    opgive
  • jack of all trades    altmuligmand, tusindkunstner
  • jack off    onanere
  • jack plug    stik
  • Jack the Lad    overfladisk og ubekymret ung mand uden omtanke for andre
  • jack up    løfte, hæve

2.
n. - ølkrus af læder, uniformsfrakke

3.
adj. - være træt af, sætte sig på bagbenene, modsætte sig

Nederlands (Dutch)
krik, dommekracht, boer (kaarten), nationale vlag, vijzel, Jan met de pet, jaquemart, rechercheur, houthakker, hoogtewerker, spitdraaier, dokje (klavecimbel), poen, mannetje (sommige diersoorten), zaling van het bramwant, bij donker jagen/vissen met lichtbak, opkrikken

Français (French)
1.
n. - (Aut) cric, valet (aux cartes)
v. tr. - chasser/pêcher avec une lanterne
v. intr. - soulever avec un cric, faire grimper (les prix, les salaires)

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    le bonhomme hiver
  • jack in    plaquer (fam), laisser tomber
  • jack into    plaquer (fam)
  • jack of all trades    bricoleur, touche-à-tout
  • jack off    se branler
  • jack plug    (Élec) fiche mâle, jack
  • jack someone around    agacer (qn)
  • Jack the Lad    esbroufeur
  • jack up    (Aut) soulever avec un cric, faire grimper (les prix, les salaires)

2.
n. - chope, pichet, (Mil) tunique

3.
adj. - (Austral, NZ) ennuyé/lassé de qch, assommant, rasant

Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Bube, Wagenheber, Hebevorrichtung, (mar.) Gösch, Buchse, Zielkugel, Bratenwender, (zool) Grashecht, (Slang) Geld, (einfacher) Mann, Matrose, Tagelöhner, (zool) Männchen
v. - mit einer Fackel fischen oder jagen

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    Frost
  • jack in    aufstecken
  • jack into    aufstecken
  • jack of all trades    Hansdampf in allen Gassen
  • jack off    masturbieren
  • jack plug    Klinkenstöpsel
  • jack someone around    jmdm. Schwierigkeiten machen
  • Jack the Lad    selbstsicherer, sorgenloser junger Mann
  • jack up    aufbocken, hochtreiben

2.
n. - schwarzer lederner Krug, ledernes Koller

3.
adj. - (Slang) überdrüssig

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - ανυψωτής, γρύλλος, βαλές, φάντης, σημαία (πρύμνης) πλοίου, (ηλεκτρ.) βύσμα, φις
v. - ανυψώνω με γρύλο
adj. - βαριεστημένος

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    ο Κυρ-Χειμώνας
  • jack in    εγκαταλείπω
  • jack of all trades    πολυτεχνίτης
  • jack off    αυνανίζομαι, μαλακίζομαι
  • jack plug    (ηλεκτρ.) βύσμα φις
  • Jack the Lad    επιδειξίας, κοκοράκι
  • jack up    σηκώνω με γρύλλο, εγκαταλείπω

Italiano (Italian)
fante, cricco

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    Mastro Gelo (nelle fiabe)
  • jack in/up    rinunciare, elevare (prezzo)
  • jack of all trades    factotum
  • jack off    masturbarsi
  • jack plug    spinotto per presa sonora
  • Jack the Lad    macho, persona che si crede di essere chi sa chi
  • jack up    abbandonare un'impresa, sollevare col cricco

Português (Portuguese)
n. - macaco (m) (Mec.), valete (m) (jogos de cartas)
v. - levantar com macaco
adj. - farto

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    personificação do tempo frio
  • jack in/up    desistir de
  • jack of all trades    pau para toda obra (fig.)
  • jack off    masturbar-se (gír.), esporrar
  • jack plug    terminal fêmea
  • Jack the Lad    um jovem que gosta de cerveja e de sair com os amigos e que se acha bonitão
  • jack up    erguer com macaco, aumentar preços, etc. (coloq.)

Русский (Russian)
домкрат, рычаг, зажим, валет

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    фед Мороз
  • jack in/up    бросать делать что-либо, поднимать домкратом
  • jack of all trades    на все руки мастер, человек, который за все берется, но толком ничего не умеет
  • jack off    бездельник (ам. сленг), онанист, тратить время попусту, путать
  • jack plug    штепсельная колодка, электрический соединитель
  • Jack the Lad    человек с преувеличенным самомнением
  • jack up    поднимать домкратом

Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - gato, sota, jota, valet
v. tr. - cazar o pescar a la encandilada
v. intr. - pescar con farol, cazar con antorcha

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    helada, escarcha, invierno, tiempo frío, el frío en persona
  • jack in    desistir, renunciar a, dejar, plantar, mandar al diablo
  • jack into    desistir, renunciar a, dejar, plantar, mandar al diablo, prender o encender un aparato electrónico
  • jack of all trades    factótum, persona de muchas aptitudes, manitas, hombre orquesta
  • jack off    masturbarse
  • jack plug    enchufe de clavija, enchufe macho
  • jack someone around    jugarle sucio a alguien
  • Jack the Lad    joven despreocupado, seguro de sí mismo, atrevido, temerario
  • jack up    levantar con gato, levantar con cric, aumentar el precio, desistir, renunciar a, dejar, plantar, mandar al diablo

2.
n. - odre, chaqueta negra de un uniforme de soldado

3.
adj. - aburrido de algo

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - karl, sjöman, (kortspel)knekt, domkraft, vinsch
v. - hissa upp, fiska med lampor
adj. - utmanande, prålig, vräkig, ytlig

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
插座, 男人, 千斤顶, 用起重机举起, 用千斤顶托起, 用灯打猎或捕鱼

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    严寒
  • jack in    停止, 放弃, 离开
  • jack of all trades    万能博士, 万事通
  • jack off    手淫, 走开
  • jack plug    塞孔
  • Jack the Lad    帮派青少年中受推崇的, 酷哥儿们
  • jack up    用千斤顶托起, 提高, 顶起

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 插座, 男人, 千斤頂
v. tr. - 用起重機舉起, 用千斤頂托起
v. intr. - 用燈打獵或捕魚

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    嚴寒
  • jack in    停止, 放棄, 離開
  • jack of all trades    萬能博士, 萬事通
  • jack off    手淫, 走開
  • jack plug    塞孔
  • Jack the Lad    幫派青少年中受推崇的, 酷哥兒們
  • jack up    用千斤頂托起, 提高, 頂起

한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 기중기, (카드놀이) 잭
v. tr. - 횃불 등으로 물고기를 잡거나 사냥하다
v. intr. - 휴대용 조명등으로 사냥하다, 횃불 등으로 밤 낚시하다

idioms:

  • jack in    포기하다
  • jack off    자위하다
  • jack plug    플러그에 꼽는 잭
  • jack up    꾸짖다

2.
n. - 조끼, 맥주용 큰 잔, 군인의 소매 없는 제복 상의

3.
adj. - 싫증난

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ジャッキ, ジャック, 雄ロバ, 雄ウサギ, 船首旗

idioms:

  • Jack Frost    霜, 厳しい寒さ
  • jack in/up    やめる
  • jack of all trades    よろず屋
  • jack off    行ってしまう
  • jack plug    ジャック用差込み
  • Jack the Lad    だらしない奴
  • jack up    つり上げる, 手配をする, 叱る, 高める, 吊り上げる

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) كنايه لمن كان اسمه الاصلي جون, شخص, رافعه, سفينه (فعل) رفع شيئا, رفع الاسعار (صفه) جزء أوطأ من باقي المبنى‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מגבה, מנוף, דגל ספינה, שקע, כדורון לבן (בכדורת), נסיך, נער (בקלפים), ברנש, כסף (מדוברת), חלוק אבן (למשחק), שוטר או בלש (מדוברת), מתקן לסיבוב שיפוד, מין דג, חוטב עצים, מתקן לפריטה על צ'מבלו, מנקה ארובות‬
v. tr. - ‮הרים במגבה, הניף, העלה משכורות (מדוברת)‬
v. intr. - ‮דג דגים בעזרת אור‬
n. - ‮כלי-קיבול לליקר, מין מעיל צבאי קצר‬
adj. - ‮מואס בדבר כלשהו (אוסטרליה, ניו-זילנד)‬


 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Heritage Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 1994-2012 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
TechEncyclopedia. THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY.
All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.
© 1981-2012 The Computer Language Company Inc.  All rights reserved.  Read more
Barron's Food Lover's Companion. Food Lover's Companion. Copyright © 2001 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Roget's Thesaurus. Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary Copyright © 1995 byHoughton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms. The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer. Copyright © 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Answers Corporation Antonyms by Answers.com. © 1999-present by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture & Construction. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Marine Corps Dictionary. Copyright © 2003 Unofficial Dictionary for Marines compiled and edited by Glenn B. Knight.  Read more
HarperCollins Neologism Dictionary. I Smirt, You Stooze, they Krump: Can You Still Speak English? © 2006 HarperCollins Publishers All rights reserved.  Read more
 Oxford Dictionary of Modern Slang. Oxford University Press. © 1997, 2008, 2010 All rights reserved.  Read more
Wiley Dictionary of Flavors. Copyright © 2008 by Wiley-Blackwell. Wiley and the Wiley logo are registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and other countries. Used here by license.  Read more
Random House Word Menu. © 2010 Write Brothers Inc. Word Menu is a registered trademark of the Estate of Stephen Glazier. Write Brothers Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
 Rhymes. Oxford University Press. © 2006, 2007 All rights reserved.  Read more
Bradford's Crossword Solver's Dictionary. Collins Bradford's Crossword Solver's Dictionary © Anne Bradford, 1986, 1993, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2008 HarperCollins Publishers All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Jack Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

Follow us
Facebook Twitter
YouTube

Mentioned in

» More» More