Advertisement
5406 entries found
sack (n.3)
"plunder; act of plundering, the plundering of a city or town after storming and capture," 1540s, from French sac "pillage, plunder," from Italian sacco (see sack (v.1)).
Related entries & more 
Advertisement
sack (v.2)
"put in a bag," late 14c., from sack (n.1). Related: Sacked; sacking.
Related entries & more 
sack (v.4)
type of U.S. football play, 1969, from sack (v.1) in the sense of "to plunder" or sack (v.2) on the notion of "put in a bag." As a noun from 1972.
Related entries & more 
sack (v.3)
"dismiss from work," 1841, from sack (n.2). Related: Sacked; sacking.
Related entries & more 
sack (n.4)
"sherry," 1530s, alteration of French vin sec "dry wine," from Latin siccus "dry" (see siccative).
Related entries & more 
Advertisement
sackbut (n.)
medieval wind instrument, c. 1500, from French saquebute, a bass trumpet with a slide like a trombone; presumably identical with Old North French saqueboute (14c.), "a lance with an iron hook for pulling down mounted men," said to be from Old North French saquier "to pull, draw" + bouter "to thrust," from Germanic *buttan, from PIE root *bhau- "to strike." Originally in English with many variant spellings, including sagbutt, shakbott, shagbush.

In Daniel iii.5, used wrongly to translate Aramaic (Semitic) sabbekha, name of a stringed instrument (translated correctly in Septuagint as sambuke, and in Vulgate as sambuca, both names of stringed instruments, and probably ultimately cognate with the Aramaic word). The error began with Coverdale (1535), who evidently thought it was a wind instrument and rendered it with shawm; the Geneva translators, evidently following Coverdale, chose sackbut because it sounded like the original Aramaic word, and this was followed in KJV and Revised versions.
Related entries & more 
sackcloth (n.)
penitential or grieving garb, late 13c., literally "cloth of which sacks are made," from sack (n.1) + cloth. In the Biblical sense it was of goats' or camels' hair, the coarsest possible clothing.
Related entries & more 
sacral (adj.)

1767, in anatomy, "of or pertaining to the sacrum," from Modern Latin sacralis. In anthropology, "pertaining to religious rites," 1882, from Latin sacrum "sacred thing, rite" (see sacred). Related: sacralization.

Related entries & more 
sacrament (n.)

late Old English, in Christian use, "a sacrament of the Church, an outward and visible sign of inward and spiritual grace," especially "the sacrament of the Eucharist" (c. 1300), from Old French sacrament "consecration; mystery" (12c., Modern French sacrement) and directly from Latin sacramentum, "a solemn oath, any engagement or ceremony that binds or imposes obligation," specifically "oath of obedience and fidelity taken by Roman soldiers on enlistment; sum which two parties to a suit first deposit," hence, "a cause, a civil suit;" in Church Latin, "a mystery, a sacrament, something to be kept sacred; the gospel revelation; a Church sacrament" (source also of Spanish sacramento, German Sakrament, etc.), from sacrare "to consecrate" (see sacred). A Church Latin loan-translation of Greek mysterion (see mystery).

In theology, particularly, "a solemn religious ceremony enjoined by Christ, or by the church, for the spiritual benefit of the church or of individual Christians, by which their special relation to him is created or recognized or their obligations to him are renewed and ratified."

The meaning "arcane knowledge; a secret; a mystery; a divine mystery" in English is from late 14c.; from c. 1400, "a solemn oath, pledge, covenant; a ceremony accompanying the taking of an oath or the making of a pledge." The seven sacraments are baptism, penance, confirmation, holy orders, the Eucharist, matrimony, and anointing of the sick (extreme unction).

Related entries & more 
sacramental (adj.)

"of, pertaining to, or constituting a sacrament," late 14c., from Old French sacramental or directly from Late Latin sacramentalis, from sacramentum (see sacrament). As a noun, "religious practice or object," mid-15c.

Related entries & more 

Page 12