jack

views updated May 11 2018

jack1 / jak/ • n. 1. a device for lifting heavy objects, esp. one for raising the axle of a motor vehicle off the ground. 2. a playing card bearing a representation of a soldier, page, or knave, normally ranking next below a queen. 3. a socket with two or more pairs of terminals. 4. (also jackstone) a small round pebble or star-shaped piece of metal used in tossing and catching games. ∎  (jacks) a game played by tossing and catching such pebbles or pieces of metal. 5. in lawn bowling, the small ball at which the players aim. 6. (Jack) inf. used as a form of address to a man whose name is not known. ∎ inf. a lumberjack. 7. a small version of a national flag flown at the bow of a vessel in harbor to indicate its nationality. 8. a device for turning a spit. 9. a part of the mechanism in a spinet or harpsichord that connects a key to its corresponding string and causes the string to be plucked when the key is pressed down. 10. a marine fish that is typically laterally compressed with a row of large spiky scales along each side. The jack family (Carangidae) includes numerous genera and species and also includes the horse mackerel, pilotfish, and kingfishes. 11. the male of some animals, esp. a merlin or an ass. 12. short for jackrabbit. 13. inf. short for jack shit.PHRASES: jack of all trades (and master of none) a person who can do many different types of work but who is not necessarily very competent at any of them.PHRASAL VERBS: jack someone around inf. cause someone inconvenience or problems, esp. by acting unfairly or indecisively.jack in (or into) inf. log into or connect up (a computer or electronic device).jack off vulgar slang masturbate.jack up inf. inject oneself with a narcotic drug.jack something up raise something, esp. a vehicle, with a jack. ∎ inf. increase something by a considerable amount.jack2 • n. hist. 1. another term for blackjack (sense 4). 2. a sleeveless padded tunic worn by foot soldiers.jack 3 / jak/ • v. [tr.] inf. take (something) illicitly; steal: his MO in the studio remains the same—jack other people's tracks and present them in a new context. ∎  rob (someone): they jacked him for his car.

Jack

views updated May 23 2018

Jack pet name of the given name John. The term was originally (in late Middle English) used to denote an ordinary man, and in the mid 16th century, a youth, hence the knave in cards, and the use of the word to denote a male animal. The word is also used for a number of devices saving human labour, as if one had a helper. The general sense of ‘labourer’ arose in the early 18th century, and since the mid 16th century, the notion of ‘smallness’ has arisen.
every Jack has his Jill all lovers have found a mate; proverbial saying, early 17th century.
Jack and Jill a nursery rhyme, in which Jack and Jill, who go up a hill for water, both fall down, with Jack breaking his crown and Jill tumbling after; it has been suggested that the origin is political, with Jack and Jill representing Henry VII's ministers Empson and Dudley, who were executed soon after Henry VIII's accession. An alternative explanation is that the rhyme is of Scandinavian origin, in the story of two children (Hjuki and Bil) who were stolen by the moon while drawing water. In North American usage, a Jack and Jill party is a party held for a couple soon to be married, to which both men and women are invited.
Jack and the Beanstalk a fairy story, recorded from the mid 18th century, about a poor boy who sells his mother's cow for a handful of beans; she throws them angrily away, but the ones that have fallen into the garden root and grow into an enormous plant. Jack climbs the beanstalk, and discovers a ferocious giant; with magic help, he first steals from the giant and then by a trick contrives his death. A beanstalk is proverbially fast-growing, but in this story it may also represent the Norse world-ash Yggdrasil.
Jack Frost a personification of frost; recorded from the early 19th century.
Jack Horner a nursery-rhyme character, ‘Little Jack Horner’, said to have ‘pulled out a plum’ from a ‘Christmas pie’; it has been suggested that this refers to a real Jack Horner who cheated his way into property at the dissolution of the monasteries.
jack-in-office a self-important minor official; the term is recorded from the early 18th century.
jack-in-the-box a toy consisting of a box containing a figure on a spring which pops up when the lid is opened; the term is recorded from the early 18th century.
Jack-in-the-green a man or boy enclosed in a wooden or wicker pyramidal framework covered with leaves, in traditional May Day celebrations.
Jack is as good as his master proverbial saying, early 18th century; Jack is used variously as a familiar name for a sailor, a member of the common people, a serving man, and one who does odd jobs.
Jack of all trades and master of none a person who has simple skills in a number of areas is not fully competent in any of them; Jack here is used in the sense of an unskilled worker, as contrasted with a master of a trade who had completed an apprenticeship. The saying is recorded from the mid 18th century.
jack-o'lantern originally a man with a lantern, a night watchman; from this, an ignis fatuus or will-o-the-wisp. The term in these senses is recorded from the 17th century. From the mid 19th century, jack-o'-lantern has also been used (originally in the US) for a lantern made from a hollowed-out pumpkin or turnip in which holes are cut to represent facial features, typically made at Halloween.
Jack Russell a terrier of a small working breed with short legs, named after the Revd John (Jack) Russell (1795–1883), an English clergyman famed in fox-hunting circles as a breeder of such terriers.
Jack Sprat, in the 16th and 17th centuries, a name for a very small man, a dwarf; in the nursery rhyme, recorded from the late 17th century, Jack Sprat is the husband who ‘could eat no fat’, while his wife ‘could eat no lean’.
Jack tar an informal name for a sailor, recorded from the late 18th century.
Jack the Giant-killer a nursery tale of Northern origin, known in England from very early times. Jack was said to be the son of a Cornish farmer, living in the days of King Arthur, who by his ingenuity acquired a coat that made him invisible, shoes which gave him great speed in running, and a magic sword. With the help of these, he destroyed all the giants in the land.
Jack the Ripper was an unidentified 19th-century English murderer. In 1888 at least six prostitutes were brutally killed in the East End of London, the bodies being mutilated in a way that indicated a knowledge of anatomy. The authorities received taunting notes from a person calling himself Jack the Ripper and claiming to be the murderer, but the cases remain unsolved despite a wide variety of names being suggested.

See also a good Jack makes a good Jill, the House that Jack built at house, Jack Ketch, all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.

Jack

views updated Jun 27 2018

Jack ★★½ 1996 (PG-13)

Tenyearold Jack Powell (Williams) suffers from a rare genetic disorder that causes him to age at four times the normal rate so he looks like a 40yearold. His family, fearing ridicule, has kept him isolated but since Jack's so lonely, they finally agree to let him attend school. This new fourth grader isn't the only one with a lot to learn. 111m/C VHS, DVD . Robin Williams, Bill Cosby, Diane Lane, Brian Kerwin, Fran Drescher, Michael McKean, Jennifer Lopez, Don Novello, Todd Bosley; D: Francis Ford Coppola; W: James DeMonaco, Gary Nadeau; C: John Toll; M: Michael Kamen.

jack

views updated May 23 2018

jack.
1. 1. Rafter set obliquely where two roofs meet (e.g. in dormers or valleys).

2. Short common rafter, such as those between the eaves and a hip.

Jack

views updated Jun 27 2018

Jack pet-form of the name John XIII; figure of a man on a clock XV; †fellow, chap XVI (cf. every man jack XIX); sailor XVII (cf. JackTAR XVIII); knave of a card suit XVII; (also j-) male worker XVII(jack-of-all-trades; cheap-jack, steeple-jack XIX). ME. Iacke, Iakke, used from the first as familiar by-form of John, perh. through dim. Jankin; the resemblance to F. Jacques James (:- Rom. *Jacobus, for L. Jacōbus) is a difficulty.

jack

views updated May 17 2018

jack1 in numerous transf. applications of the name JACK to implements and machines, or their parts, the male of animals (cf. JACKASS), fishes (esp. pike, orig. young or small pike), etc., from XVI.
Hence vb. (with up) hoist with a jack (lifting machine); (sl.) ruin; give up, abandon. XIX.

jack

views updated Jun 27 2018

jack3 ship's flag smaller than the ensign. XVII. prob. spec. application of JACK1 to an object of small size. XVII.

jack

views updated May 14 2018

jack2.
A. †jacket; (arch.) leather or iron-plated tunic XIV;

B. (leathern) vessel for liquor XVI. — (O)F. jaque, of unkn. orig.

jack

views updated May 17 2018

jack. See harpsichord.

jack

views updated May 29 2018

jack See CARANGIDAE.

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