jack up

Senso (Inglese)

  1. To raise, hoist, or lift a thing using a jack, or similar means.
  2. (informal) To raise, increase, or accelerate; often said of prices, fees, or rates.
  3. (colloquial) To ruin; wreck; mess up; screw up; sometimes as a bowdlerized substitution for fuck up.
  4. (Australia, West-Country, dialectal, intransitive, obsolete, transitive) To give up; to abandon (something, e.g. a job, contract)
  5. (New-Zealand) To organise something.
  6. (colloquial) To shoot, especially in the context of a poor shot opportunity.
  7. (slang, transitive) To improve or embellish on (something).
  8. (informal) To refuse to follow an order.
  9. (informal) To criticize, discipline or reprimand.

Traduzioni

hochwinden

aufbocken

vijzelen

enlairar

elevar

Etimologia (Inglese)

* Sense of “hoist with a jack” is from 1885; then, “increase prices, etc.” (1904, American English); both ultimately from noun jack (“mechanical device used to raise heavy objects”) * “Screw up, mess up” sense derived from, or influenced by fuck up, as a bowdlerization; also possibly influenced by jacked up (“high, intoxicated”) * First dialectal idiomatic meaning: “abandon, give up” (1873), possibly a corruption of chuck up, as chuck up the sponge (“give up, concede, give token of submission”)

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