TERMINATE vs SACK: NOUN
- N/A
- A short loose-fitting garment for women and children.
- The amount that a sack can hold.
- A bag, especially one made of strong material for holding grain or objects in bulk.
- The looting or pillaging of a captured city or town.
- The termination of someone's employment (leaving them free to depart)
- An enclosed space
- A bed, mattress, or sleeping bag.
- A hanging bed of canvas or rope netting (usually suspended between two trees); swing easily
- A loose-fitting dress hanging straight from the shoulders without a waist
- The quantity contained in a sack
- Any of various light dry strong white wine from Spain and Canary Islands (including sherry)
- A woman's full loose hiplength jacket
- A bag made of paper or plastic for holding customer's purchases
- The plundering of a place by an army or mob; usually involves destruction and slaughter
- Dismissal from employment.
- A bag for holding and carrying goods of any kind; a receptacle made of some kind of pliable material, as cloth, leather, and the like; a large pouch.
- A measure of varying capacity, according to local usage and the substance. The American sack of salt is 215 pounds; the sack of wheat, two bushels.
- Originally, a loosely hanging garment for women, worn like a cloak about the shoulders, and serving as a decorative appendage to the gown; now, an outer garment with sleeves, worn by women.
- The pillage or plunder, as of a town or city; the storm and plunder of a town; devastation; ravage.
- Any of various light, dry, strong wines from Spain and the Canary Islands, imported to England in the 1500s and 1600s.
- A sack coat; a kind of coat worn by men, and extending from top to bottom without a cross seam.
- See 2d Sac, 2.
- A posset made of sack, and some other ingredients.
- A name formerly given to various dry Spanish wines.
- In anatomy and zoology, a sac or saccule.
- [Also spelled sacque.] A kind of jacket or short coat, cut round at the bottom, fitting the body more or less closely, worn at the present day by both men and women: as, a sealskin sack; a sack-coat.
- The loose straight back itself. The term seems to have been used in this sense in the eighteenth century.
- [Also spelled sacque.] A gown of a peculiar form which was first introduced from France into England toward the close of the seventeenth century, and continued to be fashionable throughout the greater part of the eighteenth, century.
- Sackcloth; sacking.
- A unit of dry measure.
- A bag; especially, a large bag, usually made of coarse hempen or linen cloth. (See sackcloth.) Sacks are used to contain grain, flour, salt, etc., potatoes and other vegetables, and coal.
- Originally, one of the strong light-colored wines brought to England from the south, as from Spain and the Canary Islands, especially those which were dry and rough.
- The plunder or booty so obtained; spoil; loot.
- The plundering of a city or town after storming and capture; plunder; pillage: as, the sack of Magdeburg.
- See Basket worm, under Basket.
- An East Indian tree (Antiaris saccidora) which is cut into lengths, and made into sacks by turning the bark inside out, and leaving a slice of the wood for a bottom.
- To discharge, or be discharged, from employment; to jilt, or be jilted.
- To go to bed.
- A base.
- A variety of light-colored dry wine from Spain or the Canary Islands; also, any strong white wine from southern Europe; sherry.
- A bag; especially a large bag of strong, coarse material for storage and handling of various commodities, such as potatoes, coal, coffee; or, a bag with handles used at a supermarket, a grocery sack; or, a small bag for small items, a satchel.
- The amount a sack holds; also, an archaic or historical measure of varying capacity, depending on commodity type and according to local usage; an old English measure of weight, usually of wool, equal to 13 stone (182 pounds), or in other sources, 26 stone (364 pounds).
- The plunder and pillaging of a captured town or city.
- A successful attempt at sacking the quarterback.
TERMINATE vs SACK: ADJECTIVE
- Terminated; limited; bounded; ended.
- Having a definite and clear limit or boundary; having a determinate size, shape or magnitude.
- Expressible in a finite number of terms; (of a decimal) not recurring or infinite.
- N/A
TERMINATE vs SACK: VERB
- Bring to an end or halt
- Have an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical
- Terminate the employment of
- Terminate the employment of; discharge from an office or position
- To end the employment contract of an employee; to fire or lay off.
- To kill.
- To finish or end.
- Be the end of; be the last or concluding part of
- Terminate the employment of
- Make as a net profit
- Put in a sack
- Plunder (a town) after capture
TERMINATE vs SACK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To bring to an end or halt.
- To occur at or form the end of; conclude or finish: : complete.
- To discontinue the employment of; dismiss.
- To murder or assassinate (someone).
- To come to an end; reach a stopping point.
- To form an end or produce a result. Often used with in.
- To come to a limit in time; to end; to close.
- N/A
TERMINATE vs SACK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To put an end to; to make to cease.
- To set a term or limit to; to form the extreme point or side of; to bound; to limit.
- Hence, to put the finishing touch to; to bring to completion; to perfect.
- To plunder or pillage, as a town or city; to devastate; to ravage.
- To bear or carry in a sack upon the back or the shoulders.
- To put in a sack; to bag.
- To place into a sack.
- To discharge from employment: : dismiss.
- To tackle (a quarterback attempting to pass the ball) behind the line of scrimmage.
- To rob (a town, for example) of goods or valuables, especially after capture.
TERMINATE vs SACK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Be the last or concluding part of
- Be the end of
- Either spatial or metaphorical
- Capable of coming to an end; limited; bounded: as, a terminate decimal. A terminate number is an integer, a mixed number, or a vulgar fraction. See interminate.
- To cease; come to an end in time; end.
- To be limited in space by a point, line, or surface; stop short; end.
- Synonyms To close, conclude.
- To bound; limit; form the extreme outline of; set a boundary or limit to; define.
- To complete; put the closing or finishing touch to; perfect.
- To end; put an end to.
- To put into sacks or bags, for preservation or transportation: as, to sack grain or salt.
- To inclose as in a bag; cover or incase as with a sack.
- To heap or pile as by sackfuls.
- To give the sack or bag to; discharge or dismiss from office, employment, etc.; also, to reject the suit of: as, to sack a lover.
- To plunder or pillage after storming and taking: as, to sack a house or a town.
- Terminate the employment of; discharge from an office or position
- Swings easily
TERMINATE vs SACK: RELATED WORDS
- Discontinue, Rescind, Termination, Give notice, Force out, Give the axe, Send away, Can, Fire, Finish, Sack, End, Stop, Dismiss, Cease
- Discharge, Shift, Net, Plunder, Fire, Firing, Paper bag, Terminate, Sac, Chemise, Pouch, Poke, Dismiss, Pocket, Dismissal
TERMINATE vs SACK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Revoke, Cancel, Suspend, Rescind, Termination, Send away, Give notice, Can, Fire, Finish, Sack, End, Stop, Dismiss, Cease
- Release, Hammock, Discharge, Shift, Net, Fire, Firing, Terminate, Sac, Chemise, Pouch, Poke, Dismiss, Pocket, Dismissal
TERMINATE vs SACK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Within days, the President decided to terminate Comey.
- How can I terminate an order of support?
- All PTP messages terminate at the boundary clock.
- Terminate this contract with respect to the aircraft.
- When the FWC must terminate an enterprise agreement.
- The easement and shall not terminate if abandoned.
- Victims are allowed to terminate their lease agreements.
- If you say that Acme may terminate at any time, that carries with it the implication that Acme may terminate for any reason.
- And terminate a partnership on amicable terms layout is vital making a great experience misunderstandings and terminate a on.
- Securus may at any time and for any reason, without prior notice, terminate the Service, terminate these Terms of Service, or terminate your account.
- Skrymir carried the sack of provisions, and that night when the group sat down to eat the sack could not be opened.
- He then walks up to the sack containing the Englishman and again gives the sack a good kick.
- He overthrew TE Charles Clay, took a sack and scrambled on another play that could've been a sack.
- The sack lunch also gives a new meaning to sack lunch.
- For a direct country sack, use a gray plastic ISAL sack.
- To sack up, or put up in a sack, Sacco inscrere, vet conderc.
- They include the tent body, poles, rain fly, stuff sack, instruction manual, stakes, pole sack and any other inclusions.
- SACK based loss recovery is used when sender and receiver support SACK options.
- Each sack must bear the correct sack label.
- Sack, sack, give to us meat and drink!
TERMINATE vs SACK: QUESTIONS
- When to terminate pregnancy after radiation exposure?
- How does an effector molecule terminate transcription?
- Where to terminate the equipment grounding conductors?
- Can Canada transfers terminate terms and conditions?
- When does an employment agreement automatically terminate?
- Does program terminate when main thread terminates?
- How does sensory adaptation terminate olfactory signals?
- Can a compassionate appointee terminate an appointment?
- Can modified valsalva manoeuvre terminate paroxysmal SVT?
- Can momentum medical scheme terminate my membership?
- Will Sturgeon sack Mhairi Black as SNP election candidate?
- Why did the previous government not sack Srivastava?
- Did England sack Kevin Pietersen save his marriage?
- Why choose Clarkes heavy duty contractor sack truck?
- Who are the manufacturers of polypropylene woven sack?
- Why did the Archdiocese sack Purley school governors?
- Why did Schalke sack their manager Domenico Tedesco?
- What is TCP selective acknowledgement options (sack)?
- How many sack bags can a woven sack cutting machine cut per minute?
- Was JJ Watt's sack of Joe Huntley officially ruled a sack?