jack up

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To raise, hoist, or lift a thing using a jack, or similar means.
  2. To raise, increase, or accelerate; often said of prices, fees, or rates.
  3. To ruin; wreck; mess up; screw up; sometimes as a bowdlerized substitution for fuck up.
  4. To give up; to abandon (something, e.g. a job, contract)
  5. To organise something.
  6. To shoot, especially in the context of a poor shot opportunity.
  7. To improve or embellish on (something).
  8. To refuse to follow an order.
  9. To criticize, discipline or reprimand.
  10. Synonym of shoot up (“inject a drug intravenously”).

Pronunciation

EN-AU ck1 jack up.ogg

Word forms

jack up jacks up jacking up jacked up

Etymology

* 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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