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shack (n.)

1878, American English and Canadian English, of unknown origin, perhaps from Mexican Spanish jacal, from Nahuatl (Aztecan) xacalli "wooden hut." Or perhaps a back-formation from dialectal English shackly "shaky, rickety" (1843), a derivative of shack, a dialectal variant of shake (v.). Another theory derives shack from ramshackle.

Slang meaning "house" attested by 1910. In early radio enthusiast slang, it was the word for a room or office set aside for wireless use, 1919, perhaps from earlier U.S. Navy use (1917). As a verb, 1891 in the U.S. West in reference to men who "hole up" for the winter; from 1927 as "to put up for the night;" phrase shack up "cohabit" first recorded 1935 (in Zora Neale Hurston).

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Definitions of shack from WordNet
1
shack (v.)
make one's home in a particular place or community;
Synonyms: reside / domicile / domiciliate
shack (v.)
move, proceed, or walk draggingly or slowly;
Synonyms: trail
2
shack (n.)
small crude shelter used as a dwelling;
Synonyms: hovel / hut / hutch / shanty
From wordnet.princeton.edu