sack

/sæk/ (bre, ipa) · /sæk/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈsak/ (ame, mw)

sack — noun

  • sacksingular
  • sacksplural

1. A very big container made of strong material such as thick fabric or heavy paper

1.名詞B1
釋義

A very big container made of strong material such as thick fabric or heavy paper, used for storing and moving large amounts of dry goods including grain, rice, flour, or cement.

例句

The farmer stored the potatoes in a large brown sack in the barn.

The kitchen had a sack of rice that weighed fifty kilograms.

sack of [dry goods] — the thing inside a sack

同義詞
  • bag

    more general; a sack is typically larger and stronger than a regular bag

  • burlap sack

    specifically a sack made from rough brown cloth, common for farm use

用法筆記

Often used with 'of' to state what is inside: a sack of potatoes, a sack of flour.

2. A paper or thin plastic bag that a shop gives you to carry the things you have b

2.名詞A2
釋義

A paper or thin plastic bag that a shop gives you to carry the things you have bought, usually for a short time.

例句

The shop assistant put my vegetables into a brown paper sack.

brown paper sack / plastic sack

Could you put these bottles in a plastic sack and tie the handles together?

同義詞
  • bag

    more general term; 'sack' in this sense is the same as a shopping bag

  • carrier bag

    the common British term for a shopping bag

用法筆記

Common in American English for a shopping bag. In British English, 'carrier bag' or 'bag' is more frequent for this sense.

3. The act of being told to leave your job, usually because your employer thinks yo

3.名詞B2
釋義

The act of being told to leave your job, usually because your employer thinks you did something wrong or needs to spend less money.

例句

After the mistake lost the company a big client, three workers got the sack.

get the sack — idiomatic

The manager gave Dario the sack for arriving late too many times.

give [someone] the sack

同義詞
  • dismissal

    more formal; used in official notices rather than casual talk

  • firing

    equally informal; 'firing' is preferred in American English

用法筆記

This sense almost always appears in the fixed expressions 'get the sack' (be fired), 'give someone the sack' (fire someone), or 'face the sack' (be at risk of being fired).

常見錯誤

He received a sack from his job.
He got the sack from his job.
💡The definite article 'the' is required in this idiom.

4. A violent attack on a town or city by soldiers or an invading group, during whic

4.名詞C1
釋義

A violent attack on a town or city by soldiers or an invading group, during which buildings are ruined and whatever is worth taking is carried off.

例句

The soldiers began the sack of the city, breaking into every house along the main road.

the sack of [place]

Old records describe the sack of the temple and the theft of its gold statues.

同義詞
  • looting

    focuses on the stealing aspect; 'sack' includes destruction too

  • plundering

    very similar in meaning, also refers to stealing during wartime

用法筆記

Historically associated with wartime. Often used in the pattern 'the sack of [place]'.

5. A play in the sport of American football in which a defender catches and stops t

5.名詞C1
釋義

A play in the sport of American football in which a defender catches and stops the quarterback, keeping him from making a throw.

例句

The quarterback avoided a sack by throwing the ball just before he was hit.

The crowd cheered loudly after the defensive player made a big sack on third down.

make a sack — the usual collocation

用法筆記

Specific to American football. A sack is different from a regular tackle because it happens behind the line of scrimmage before the quarterback can pass.

6. An informal word for a bed, used particularly in the expression 'hit the sack' m

6.名詞B2
釋義

An informal word for a bed, used particularly in the expression 'hit the sack' meaning to go to sleep for the night.

例句

After working the night shift, Harper just wanted to hit the sack before noon.

hit the sack — go to bed

The children were told to get into the sack and stop talking.

同義詞
  • bed

    the standard, neutral term for sleeping

  • cot

    a narrow, simple bed

用法筆記

Rarely used alone; almost always appears in 'hit the sack' or 'in the sack' (see sense 7).

7. A very casual way of saying how skilled a person is at sex, always used in expre

7.名詞C1
釋義

A very casual way of saying how skilled a person is at sex, always used in expressions such as 'good in the sack' or 'bad in the sack'.

例句

Rania laughed at the old song lyric about being good in the sack.

The gossip magazine claimed the actor was supposed to be amazing in the sack.

good/bad/amazing in the sack — fixed phrase for sexual skill

用法筆記

Crude slang. Only found in the expression '[adjective] in the sack'. Not used in polite or formal conversation.

8. A woman's dress or short coat that hangs loosely from the shoulders, with no fit

8.名詞C1
釋義

A woman's dress or short coat that hangs loosely from the shoulders, with no fitted waist and a straight, relaxed shape.

例句

The fashion show featured a new collection of silk sack dresses in pale colors.

sack dress / sack coat — fashion terms

Iker wore a loose brown sack coat over her jeans on the cold morning.

同義詞
  • shift dress

    a similar loose dress that hangs straight from the shoulders

  • tunic

    a loose top or dress that reaches to the hips or knees

用法筆記

Mostly used in fashion history or vintage clothing contexts. A sack dress does not define the waistline.

sack — verb