Definition, Betydelse, Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet SHACK


SHACK

Definition av SHACK

  1. skjul, timmerkoja
  2. (slang, ålderdomligt) biträdande konduktör på tåg

3

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Antal bokstäver

5

Är palindrom

Nej

8
AC
ACK
CK
HA
HAC
SH
SHA

59

5

96

86
AC
ACH
ACK
ACS
AH
AHS


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Exempel på hur man kan använda SHACK i en mening

  • On the way to Marathon to capture the Bull, Theseus sought shelter from a storm in a shack owned by an ancient lady named Hecale.
  • Copperopolis is near Tuttletown, which has a shack on Jack Ass Hill, where Mark Twain is supposed to have written one of his most famous works, "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County".
  • In the early 1930s, Zeb Vance Hooker and his family became the first settlers in modern-day Lake Clarke Shores by squatting in a wooden shack on land by the southeast side of Lake Clarke.
  • The first residence constructed in Agate Bay was owned by Thomas Sexton (1854); it was a 14-by-16-foot shack.
  • The first known dwelling in contemporary Belle Terre was a shack constructed by an African-American affectionately known as Uncle Mott in the 1800s.
  • In 1888, the first settlement in the area was established as Stevens, a railhead tent and shack village, built just southwest of present South Coffeyville.
  • Rogers and his young wife Abbie Palmer Gifford Rogers lived in a one-room shack there along Oil Creek for several years.
  • He began making music at the age of 12, using a simple one-string instrument (diddley bow, or jitterbug) strung on a shack wall.
  • When Trygve was deported from the United States for overstaying his visa, his mother, Aud, continued keeping her father's body cryogenically frozen in a shack behind her unfinished house.
  • His family endured a cold winter—the warmest place in their shack was on the kitchen table, so they kept the baby there—and in the spring their crops were destroyed by hail.
  • The fried clam recipe was reportedly invented in Essex by clam shack owner Chubby Woodman during the summer of 1916 after a visiting friend suggested he dip a clam in a fryer.
  • A structure with various local names, but often called an ice shanty, ice shack, fish house, shack, icehouse, bobhouse, or ice hut, is sometimes used.
  • the name Qʼumaʼrkaʼaaj translates more precisely as "rotted reed houses" (qʼumaʼr = "rotten"; kaʼaaj = "house or shack built of cane and reeds").


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