tack
tack definition
tack (tak)
noun
- a short nail or pin, with a narrow shaft that is not tapered and a relatively large, flat head
- the act of fastening, esp. in a slight or temporary way
- Sewing a stitch for marking darts, etc. from a pattern, clipped and later removedin full tailor's tack
- stickiness; adhesiveness
- a zigzag course, or movement in such a course
- a course of action or policy, esp. one differing from another or a preceding course
Etymology: < ?
food; foodstuff hardtack- Naut.
- a rope for securing the forward lower corner of a fore-and-aft sail
- this corner
- the direction in which a vessel is moving in relation to the position of the sails
- a change of direction in which the sail or sails shift from one side of the vessel to the other
- a course against the wind
- any of a series of zigzag movements in such a course
- equipment for riding a horse, as saddles, bridles, etc.; saddlery
Etymology: ME takke < MDu tacke, twig, point, akin to Ger zacke < ? IE base *dek-, to tear > tail
transitive verb
- to fasten or attach with tacks
- to attach temporarily, as by sewing with long stitches
- to attach as a supplement; add to tack an amendment onto a bill
- Horsemanship to put a saddle, bridle, etc. on (a horse): often with up
- Naut.
- to change the course of (a vessel) by turning its bow into and across the wind
- to maneuver (a vessel) against the wind by a series of tacks
intransitive verb
- Naut.
- to tack a sailing vessel
- to change its course by being tacked, or sail against the wind by a series of tacks: said of a sailing vessel
- to go in a zigzag course
- to change suddenly one's policy or course of action
Related Forms:
- tacker tack′er noun
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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