swacking

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

swacking

  1. present participle and gerund of swack

Adjective[edit]

swacking (comparative more swacking, superlative most swacking)

  1. (slang) Huge; whopping.
    • 1866, Arthur Locker, Sweet seventeen - Volume 3, page 249:
      He deserves a swacking bonus for persuading me to make my letter into pipe-lights.
    • 1923, Norman George Brett-James, The History of Mill Hill School, 1807-1923, page 125:
      When Arthur first did rule the land, He made a large pudding a ding ding, Great swacking plums he did put in, etc., etc.
    • 1986, Time - Volume 127, page 10:
      [] the human face, close up and cropped by the frame, a pearly or tanned mask of flat paint with schemantic shading, great swacking eyelashes and lipstick-colored lips.
  2. Characteristic of a swack.
    • 1950, John Jennings, The Pepper Tree, page 188:
      There was a swacking sound of clubbed wood upon flesh;
    • 1967, Roger A. Caras, North American Mammals, page 265:
      If you are careless in your approach you will hear a great swacking sound echo through the trees and see a mighty spray of water — then all will be quiet.
    • 2001, Jake Logan, Railroad to Hell, page 4:
      "What went on? How come those two got killed?" demanded the burlier of the pair, tapping a nightstick across his palm with loud swacking sounds.