whacking

listen to the pronunciation of whacking
English - English
the act of inflicting corporal punishment with repeated blows
(British informal) enormous; "a whacking phone bill"; "a whacking lie"
{s} large and impressive, enormous (British Slang)
extremely; "a whacking good story
extremely; "a whacking good story"
present participle of whack
emphasis You can use whacking to emphasize how big something is. The supermarkets may be making whacking profits. = enormous Whacking is also an adverb. a whacking great hole. whacking great very big = whopping
Very large; whapping
(British informal) enormous; "a whacking phone bill"; "a whacking lie" extremely; "a whacking good story
{i} flogging, whipping, lashing, beating
whack
A blow, impact or slap
whack
An attempt
whack
To hit, slap or strike
whack
{i} blow, hard hit; jolting experience (Slang); part, piece (Slang); proper functioning (Slang)
whack
A smart resounding blow
whack
A share or portion
whack
{f} whip, hit hard; try, attempt (Slang); share equally (Slang)
whack
A portion; share; allowance
whack
Something hang glider pilots shout when they see a friend digging in the glider's nose on landing Or what happens to a paraglider flying the lee side in rotor as in "I just got whacked hard "
whack
To share or parcel out
whack
If you whack someone or something, you hit them hard. You really have to whack the ball Someone whacked him on the head. Whack is also a noun. He gave the donkey a whack across the back with his stick
whack
the act of hitting vigorously; "he gave the table a whack"
whack
v According to arch-hacker James Gosling, to " modify a program with no idea whatsoever how it works " (See {whacker} ) It is actually possible to do this in nontrivial circumstances if the change is small and well-defined and you are very good at {glark}ing things from context As a trivial example, it is relatively easy to change all `stderr' writes to `stdout' writes in a piece of C filter code which remains otherwise mysterious
whack
(B) double (for penalties)
whack
To kill, bump off
whack
Your whack of something is your share of it. The majority of people in this country pay their whack We need to win a fair whack of the contracts. = share
whack
the sound made by a sharp swift blow hit hard; "The teacher whacked the boy
whack
the sound made by a sharp swift blow
whack
hit hard; "The teacher whacked the boy"
whack
To strike; to beat; to give a heavy or resounding blow to; to thrash; to make with whacks
whack
To divide into shares; as, to whack the spoils of a robbery; often with up
whack
To strike anything with a smart blow
whacking
Favorites