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Shack1878, American English and Canadian English, of unknown origin, perhaps from Mexican Spanish jacal, from Nahuatl (Aztecan) xacalli "wooden hut." Or perhaps a back-formation from dialectal En [..]
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Shackhovel: small crude shelter used as a dwelling reside: make one's home in a particular place or community; "may parents reside in Florida" trail: move, proceed, or [..]
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Shackkhalupe
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Shack(n) small crude shelter used as a dwelling(v) make one's home in a particular place or community(v) move, proceed, or walk draggingly or slowly
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ShackA scamp. To shack or shackle is to tie a log to a horse, and send it out to feed on the stubble after harvest. A shack is either a beast so shackled, the right of sending a beast to the stubble, or th [..]
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ShackA brakeman, occupant of caboose. Shacks master is a conductor. A railroad term.
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ShackA pilot slang to a good ground target hit.
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Shackdirect hit on target
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Shack
A crude, roughly built hut or cabin.
*(cambuche,m),es|casa bruja|m,(chabola,f),(champa,f),(jacal,m),(rancho,m),(tugurio,m)
* Ukrainian:da|2=was "leve sammen med" - assumed inflected form or vocalis [..]
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