释义 |
cack; cak; kack verb- to fall asleep US, 1959
- — Robert George Reisner, The Jazz Titans, p. 153, 1960
- — Robert S. Gold, A Jazz Lexicon, p. 46, 1964
- to defecate UK, 1436
Like many other words for bodily functions, “cack” was part of everyday conventional speech for many years before slipping into impolite usage in the late C19. - The cunt’s caked his fucking pants. Fucking stinks. — Stephen Fry, Revenge, p. 91, 2000
▶ cack your dacks- to lose control of your bowels AUSTRALIA
- If anything it looked as funny as buggery. Fair dinks, I just about kacked my dacks when I saw it. — Roy Slaven (John Doyle), Five South Coast Seasons, p. 148, 1992
- to become scared AUSTRALIA
- Naturally enough I thought he was just kacking his dacks a bit because it was me hopping in–being police and whatnot, a lot of people do that[.] — Roy Slaven (John Doyle), Five South Coast Seasons, p. 158, 1992
▶ cack yourself- to be terrified UK
Literally “to shit yourself” used figuratively (most of the time), often as an exaggeration. - The bloke, clocking the size of Ally [...], cacks himself. He drops the plank and runs off. — Martin King and Martin Knight, The Naughty Nineties, p. 39, 2000
- to laugh uncontrollably AUSTRALIA
A variant is “cack yourself laughing”. - On the other hand, these are also the kind of people who don’t cack themselves when they see someone slip on dog poo. — Sydney Morning Herald (Guide), p. 13, 18 May 1987
- — Roy Slaven (John Doyle), Five South Coast Seasons, p. 148, 1992
- But when I told the class during big lunch they all cacked themselves laughing. — Hugh Lunn, Fred & Olive’s Blessed Lino, p. 18, 1993
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