fack

One of the four stomachs of a ruminating animal; rumen; paunch.

Noun

  1. One of the four stomachs of a ruminating animal; rumen; paunch.

Origin

From Middle English *fak, fec, fæc (“space, compartment”), from Old English fæc (“space of time, while, division, interval; period of five years, lustrum”), from Proto-West Germanic *fak, from Proto-Germanic *faką (“division, department, space”), from Proto-Indo-European *peh₂ǵ-, *paǵ- (“to fasten, fix”). Cognate with West Frisian fek, Dutch vak (“section, compartment”), German Fach (“compartment”), Swedish fack (“compartment, box, department”), Latin pangō (“fasten, fix”). Doublet of Fach.

Forms

facks fec

Verb

  1. Pronunciation spelling of fuck.

Forms

facks facking facked

Derived

fack off