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The word hack

(11 Posts)
travelsafar Mon 24-Oct-22 21:05:09

Where did this word 'hack' come from?People use it all the time and I believe they use it instead of the word 'idea' I always thought it meant cutting something up very badly ie not I slices or cubes.

GrannyGravy13 Mon 24-Oct-22 21:11:57

I guess it comes from hack to cut down, as in cut down on time used to do something.

BlueBelle Mon 24-Oct-22 21:21:59

Well I often say I can’t hack it meaning I can’t take it / can’t do it that’s how it’s used around here

Oopsadaisy1 Mon 24-Oct-22 21:45:10

I’ve never heard it used in the context of ‘idea’.

I’ve been on a hack with some horses.

I sometimes can’t hack something difficult.

and my FB page was hacked.

Bodach Mon 24-Oct-22 21:55:54

Also used in some military circles when synchronising timepieces, as in "Coming up to 08:15 in 3...2...1...hack!"

grumppa Mon 24-Oct-22 22:18:27

I thought a hack was a not very good journalist.

Callistemon21 Mon 24-Oct-22 22:22:04

grumppa

I thought a hack was a not very good journalist.

Ditto

Also a hack on a horse
Hack down the overgrown ivy
Hack away at a tough steak
Hack as in cyber attack.

Chestnut Tue 25-Oct-22 00:18:54

I think hack is an American expression which has now arrived in the UK and means 'tip' as in 'helpful idea' not the money you give to your hairdresser.

Kim19 Tue 25-Oct-22 05:28:17

Think it 'arrived' here many years ago and I recognise quite a few of the meanings suggested here.

Grannynannywanny Tue 25-Oct-22 06:25:54

I can’t hack the hacks that appear daily on my Google home page from folk claiming to be professional cooks, cleaners, supermarket workers etc. All professing to know some wonderful tip or shortcut which has allegedly gone viral since it was revealed.

I’ve seen some truly groundbreaking examples such as the professional cleaner who revealed her secret hack for cleaning a pair of Crocs after walking on the beach…immerse them in a bucket of warm soapy water!

Or the supermarket worker who published her secret hack for avoiding supermarket queues. You’ll never be able to guess this ingenious hack …avoid going at peak times! ?

Witzend Tue 25-Oct-22 11:53:49

I’ve always thought ‘tip’ usually means the same thing. Goodness where ‘hack’ came from in this context.

I’ve known it only as in riding (a horse), or in the expression, ‘can’t hack it’, as in unable to cope with something.