Talk:jack

Removed text
I've removed this text, which belongs under "jack up", not "jack":


 * 1) To raise an item using a jack (sense 1).
 * Example: He jacked the car up before changing the tire


 * Italian: sollevare (con il cric)

-- Paul G 20:52, 14 Feb 2004 (UTC)


 * See jack up DCDuring TALK 17:04, 7 July 2009 (UTC)

Carjack
How about as a shortening of carjack?


 * Or of hijack. But did those terms come from some sense of jack? DCDuring TALK 17:05, 7 July 2009 (UTC)



Hijack is 1920's and is an original term, "carjack" is a portmanteau of "car" and "hijack" and it seems most likely that the modern "jack" is a contraction of "carjack" but good luck proving THAT as "jack" as a contraction of "hijack" was around but fell into disuse.

RFV discussion
Rfv-sense: baseball slang interjection. DCDuring TALK 16:37, 7 July 2009 (UTC)
 * Very hard to search for this using Google. (Do the BYU corpora help? I'm unfamiliar with them.) This page (equivalently, in case that's 404, this one) make it seem like a noun, and capitalized. Of course, that's not durably archived. I've found the following book hit so far, but POS is unclear:
 * 1994, April Sinclair, Coffee Will Make You Black, 2000 Harper Perennial edition, ISBN 0380724596, page 27 :
 * I could hear my brothers clapping and yelling. "Home run, jack! Home run, jack!"
 * Make of it what you will. &#x200b;—  msh210  ℠  16:57, 7 July 2009 (UTC)
 * concur that it's a noun. &#x200b;—  msh210  ℠  18:54, 7 July 2009 (UTC)
 * I'm used to hearing it as a noun "23 jacks on the season" (sounds really silly in British English, that). It does exist as a verb, but I don't think either sense is quite correct. And the interjection is right just shouting the noun "jack". That should REALLY go. Mglovesfun (talk) 14:44, 23 December 2009 (UTC)

RFV failed, interjection removed. Anyone wishing to add the noun, please feel free. —Ruakh TALK 13:17, 29 August 2010 (UTC)

RFC
A jumble, especially of etymologies. DCDuring TALK 13:35, 20 December 2008 (UTC)
 * Striking. I see no jumble of etymologies. I do not see what should be cleaned up. Originally tagged in . The first etymology has been expanded a bit in the meanwhile. --Dan Polansky 12:38, 27 May 2011 (UTC)

transitive verb: pry something open
transitive verb: to open something by prying it apart (slang) Microsoft® Encarta® 2009 --Backinstadiums (talk) 18:34, 28 May 2020 (UTC)

RFV discussion: May–June 2020
Rfv-sense: Noun (baseball) A home run.

I didn't find such a definition at. It does appear in some on-line glossaries, including Glossary of baseball. It appears in some blogs, but not in Books or UseNet. DCDuring (talk) 19:43, 28 May 2020 (UTC)
 * Cited from Usenet. --Einstein2 (talk) 21:19, 28 May 2020 (UTC)
 * Oh, yea, plural. Good job. Thanks. BTW, the baseball noun and verb definition seem to come from the idea of jacking something up, elevating something, which would place it with all the definitions with similar sense evolution in Etymology 1, not in its own etymology section. DCDuring (talk) 02:00, 29 May 2020 (UTC)

RFV-passed Kiwima (talk) 19:35, 7 June 2020 (UTC)

vexillology
a jack is a kind of flag, but https://newspapers.com/image/583604029 seems to also use it as a synonym for 'canton'. Arlo Barnes (talk) 08:33, 16 May 2023 (UTC)