mack1

[mak] /mæk/
noun
1.
a pimp.
verb (used without object)
2.
to flirt with or make sexual advances toward someone (often followed by on):
They spend their nights macking on the ladies.
Origin
1885-90; by shortening of mackerel pimp < Middle French; see mackerel

mack2

[mak] /mæk/
noun, Informal.
1.
mac2 .

Mack

[mak] /mæk/
noun
1.
Connie
[kon-ee] /ˈkɒn i/ (Show IPA),
(Cornelius McGillicuddy) 1862–1956, U.S. baseball player and manager.
2.
a male given name.
Examples from the web for mack
  • The secret world of alex mack alex and her sister playing a game of scrabble.
British Dictionary definitions for mack

mac

/mæk/
noun
1.
(Brit, informal) short for mackintosh (sense 1), mackintosh (sense 3)

mack1

/mæk/
noun
1.
(Brit, informal) a variant spelling of mac short for mackintosh (sense 1), mackintosh (sense 3)

mack2

/mæk/
noun
1.
(slang) a pimp
Word Origin
C19: shortened from obsolete mackerel, from Old French, of uncertain origin
Word Origin and History for mack

Mack

proprietary name for a brand of heavy automobile trucks, named for brothers John M., Augustus F., and William C. Mack, who established Mack Brothers Company, N.Y., N.Y., in 1902. Their trucks formally known as "Mack Trucks" from 1910.

Slang definitions & phrases for mack

mack

noun

A pimp: copped you a mack

Related Terms

mac1

[1887+; fr 15thcentury mackerel, ''pimp,'' fr Old French macquerel, perhaps related to Dutch makelaar, ''trade, traffic,'' hence ultimately to make, macher, etc]