Whack Meaning in English
word
/ˈhwæk/
wak
/wˈæk/
wak
التعريف
As a noun, 'whack' means a hard hit or blow. As a verb, it means to hit something or someone with force, and in informal English it can also describe something as strange or not normal.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
Mostly informal. Common patterns include 'give it a whack', 'whack someone on the head', and 'out of whack' (not working properly or not normal). The verb often sounds rougher and more sudden than 'hit'.
Spanish: golpe - dar un golpePortuguese (BR): pancada - baterPortuguese (PT): pancada - baterChinese (Simplified): 猛击 - 重打Chinese (Traditional): 猛擊 - 重打Hindi: जोरदार चोट - जोर से मारनाArabic: ضربة قوية - يضرب بقوةBengali: চপেটাঘাত - আঘাত - অস্বাভাবিক (অদ্ভুত)Russian: удар - стук - странный (разг.)Japanese: 強打 - 殴る - 変(へん)(俗語)Vietnamese: cú đập mạnh - đánh mạnh - kỳ quặc (lóng)Korean: 세게 때리기 - 세게 때리다 - 이상한 (속어)Turkish: sert darbe - şiddetle vurmak - garip (argo)Urdu: زور کی چوٹ - زور سے مارنا - عجیب (عام بول چال)Indonesian: pukulan keras - memukul keras - aneh (gaul)
جمل نموذجية
He gave the ball a whack with the bat.
basic
Don't whack the table like that.
basic
The clock is out of whack again.
basic
If the door gets stuck, just give it a whack.
natural
He accidentally whacked his elbow on the door frame.
natural
Something is whack about this deal, so I'm saying no.
natural