sacker

名词 n.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A person who sacks or plunders.
    — Direptor & vexator vrbis. Cicer[o]. A spoy[l]er and sacker of a citie.
  2. Alternative form of saker (cannon) alt-of,alternative
  3. A person who fills or makes sacks or bags.
    — 1929, P. D. Peterson, Through the Black Hills and Bad Lands of South Dakota, Pierre, SD: J. Fred Olander, Chapter 5 “Cement Plant,” p. 41, There are two men, known as sackers who, with the use of machinery, can fill 15,000 to 20,000 sacks a day.
  4. A person who fills or makes sacks or bags.; Synonym of bagger (“retail employee who bags customers' purchases”).
    — Know a grocery sacker with a pension like that?
  5. A machine or device for filling sacks.
    — 1950, E. D. Gordon and W. M. Hurst, Artificial Drying of Forage Crops, Washington: DC, United States Department of Agriculture, Circular No. 443, p. 20, The feeder conveys the chopped alfalfa to the drying-drum—from the drum the dried forage is conveyed through one or more cooling cyclones to a hammer mill—then through one or more cyclones for further cooling and finally to a sacker.
  6. A person who sacks or fires (dismisses someone from a job or position).
    — Romanov was a serial sacker of managers, picked the team himself at times from Vilnius […]
  7. A baseman (player positioned at or near a base). in-compounds
    — The ball crossed the base before he did, but it bounded between the third sacker’s feet, and score two was marked up for Hollis Creek, with nobody out!
  8. A player who sacks (tackles the offensive quarterback behind the line of scrimmage before he is able to throw a pass).
    — The loss of last year’s leading sacker, Kerry Hyder Jr., for the season with an Achilles injury is still problematic.

词形变化

sackers plural sackers plural

词源

Etymology tree
English sack
Proto-Indo-European *-yósder.
Proto-Italic *-āzijos
Latin -āriusnom.
Latin -āriusbor.
Proto-Germanic *-ārijaz
Proto-West Germanic *-ārī
Old English -ere
Middle English -ere
English -er
English sacker
From sack + -er.
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