Gack
From Fresh Dictionary
Contents |
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English
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Etymology
Apparently from the sound made; believed to have first appeared in comic strips.
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Interjection
gack
- (often repeated several times) The sound of a cat coughing up a hairball.
- Also used of similar noises, particularly one made to show disgust or disapproval.
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Intransitive Verb
gack
- To make a 'gack' noise.
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Quotations
- 1995: âGack,â said Judith. âI donât remember that. I wish you hadnât. âMary Daheim, Major Vices [1]
- 1999: Sports was immediately consigned to a recycle pile where it was handy in case she heard the unmistakable gack-gack-gack machine-gun regurgitation sound of Midnight Louie about to deposit a hairball on some particularly cherished piece of paper or furniture. âCarole Nelson Douglas, Cat in an Indigo Mood [2]
- 2000: He rubbed his throat, gacked like a cat spitting up a hair ball. âDennis Lehane, Prayers for Rain [3]
- 2002: I watch him to see if itâs just a furball or something worse, and I have to rush him to the hospital, but it turns out to be a furball. âGack. Gack. Gack.â (Their furball-throwing-up noise.) âStacy Horn, Waiting for My Cats to Die [4]
- 2003: As I am laying concrete blocks to fix the foundation, I hear âgack gack gackâ from the forest, getting closer. Then a large pileated woodpecker buzzes me twice before settling on the elderberry bush, [...] gacking at me sometimes to let me know he is very alert; [...] And he gacks and watches back out of one eye. âMarcus E Ryan, Two Diaries. [5]
- 2004: I practiced faithfully every day, drawing my bow as she instructed, making my violin go Gack! Gack! like a cat coughing up a hairball. âEvelina Chao, Yeh Yeh's House [6]