A knack is a talent for something. Here are some sentences.
I just wrote a sentence with the word knack! I just cannot seem to get the knack of structuring sentences.
Some things are quite tricky to do, and if you don't have the knack you'll probably fail.
No, it is not. Correctly it would be: She has a knack for creativity.
Knack is a noun.
Please call collect at your convenience. This knick knack will just collect a lot of dust.
The pronoun he is singular, while the pronoun they is plural. The persuasive lobbyist had a singular knack for getting others to agree with him.
Because Mom has such a knack for growing plants, I asked her to care for my garden when I spent a month overseas.
Riding my bike was a knack I though I would never pick up, but I persevered and now I'm out on it everyday. She has a real knack for decorating and every room in her home is beautiful. I struggled to teach our son the math facts, but my husband has a knack for explaining them in a simple manner.
What are those on your shelf? Oh, those are my knick knacks and collectibles. or- Knick knack patty whack give a dog a bone.
Knack definition, a special skill, talent, or aptitude: He had a knack for saying the Middle English: trick; perhaps same word as knak sharp-sounding.
Nack is not a word, however in British and US English "Knack" is a word (pronounced with a silent k) , which means to have a skill or tendency to do something. For example. "John had a knack of cheering anyone up."
Meaning "capacity" or "skill," the term "knack" is not common in contemporary English but can be usefully employed. One example-sentence for its use is as follows: "He very much appreciated her knack for editing without having had any formal training at all; however, he still intended to hire a professional before actually submitting the paper for publication. "