"To whack" is to strike or hit. If something is "out of whack," it is improperly balanced or improperly working. The image is that it has been hit inorrectly so that it is off-balance or not working properly.
No, "sprinkle" is not an onomatopoeia. An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the sound it represents, such as "buzz" or "whack." "Sprinkle" is a verb that describes the action of scattering small particles over something.
To claim ownership or possession of something, you would say that it is "yours."
Yes, it is correct to say that something impacted someone's life. When you say "impacted on someone's life," you are emphasizing the effect that something had on that person's life.
???? It depends what you want to say like hello in Portuguese is Ola etc...
It is customary to say "thank you" after someone has done something for you or has given you something as a gesture of gratitude.
Whack it with something?
Eres loco
To hardly hit something or some one with an object or hand
Throw a club, Kick something, Whack their club off the ground, Throw a club up a tree, Throw a club against their bag, Throw a club into pond, Bend a club over their knee, Say a swear word, Say a combination of swear words, or give up the game.
Whack Records was created in 2003.
you ca say tap, smack, stroke and also whack to some extent.
Something 'thrown out of whack' is disrupted, disturbed, or disoriented from it's normal state. It is a phrase, with a negative connotation, often used to describe a system/cycle that has been changed temporarily. "My stomach is thrown out of whack from all the junk food I've been eating recently" "My sense of time is thrown out of whack from all the traveling I've just done" "Ever since I banged my watch it's been thrown out of whack" In speech, the phrase is often led by the word "all":
Mom told me: "You know it is not good to whack people!
The word 'wacky' (no 'h') is an adjective; a word that describes a noun as absurd, amusingly eccentric, or irrational. Examples are a wacky idea, a wacky comedian.The word 'whack' (with 'h') is both a verb and a noun:Forms of the verb are whack, whacks, whacking, whacked; to strike or cut off with a blow. Example: Just whack off the branches that have no leaves.forms of the noun are whack and whacks; a resounding blow, or the sound of or like the sound of a blow; a critical attack. Example: I saw the car come up the drive, then I heard a whack like it hit something.
Yes there are loads of games like "whack your boss"
whack - a sharp resounding blow: He whacked the boy with the back of his hand.
whack to the future is inappropriate for kids because it uses very bad language. whack to the future are a series of videos on youtube that exploit inappropriate concepts