flack

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
14
Words With Friends
16
Letters
5
Pronunciation
/flæk/

Definition of flack

7 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. (intransitive, obsolete)To flutter; palpitate.
See all 7 definitions

verb

  1. (intransitive, obsolete)To flutter; palpitate.
  2. (UK, dialectal, intransitive)To hang loosely; flag.
  3. (UK, dialectal, transitive)To beat by flapping.
  4. (Canada, US)To publicise, to promote.
    “[..] he told funny stories about his early days in the theater district, flacking shows up and down the street, but Klara wasn’t listening.”

noun

  1. (Canada, US)A publicist, a publicity agent.
    “Edward Bernay, who was a consultant to the US Delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference which terminated the first World War (and who finally wound up as a flack for the United Fruit Company in Latin America), believed that propaganda and its covert marketing could effectively alter the will of the American public.”
    “Thought you were flack," she said. "I'm not flack." "All right, P.R., a reporter, a novelist."”
    “In July, Nick Clegg, a former Deputy Prime Minister of the U.K. who is now a top flack at Facebook, published a piece on AdAge.com and on the company’s official blog titled “Facebook Does Not Benefit from Hate,” in which he wrote, “There is no incentive for us to do anything but remove it.””
    “And he [Ben Shapiro] called Stephen K. Bannon, the onetime chief strategist for Mr. Trump, a former “P.R. flack for Jeffrey Epstein.””
  2. (alt-of, alternative, countable, uncountable)Alternative spelling of flak.

name

  1. A surname.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English flacken (“to palpitate, flutter”), from Old English *flaccian, from Proto-West Germanic *flakkōn, from Proto-Germanic *flakkōną (“to beat”), from Proto-Indo-European *pleḱ-, which could be related to Ancient Greek…

See full etymology

From Middle English flacken (“to palpitate, flutter”), from Old English *flaccian, from Proto-West Germanic *flakkōn, from Proto-Germanic *flakkōną (“to beat”), from Proto-Indo-European *pleḱ-, which could be related to Ancient Greek πλάζω (plázō, “to turn away from”). Akin to Middle Dutch vlacken (“to flicker, flash, sparkle”), Danish flakke (“to wander”), Swedish flacka (“to rove, rove about, ramble”), Icelandic flakka (“to move”). Compare also Icelandic flaka (“to flap, hang loose”), Swedish flaxa (“to flap, flutter”).

Anagrams of flack

1 play · some not in Scrabble

Words you can make from flack

13 playable · top: FLAK (11 pts)

Best play flak 11 points

4-letter words

3 words

3-letter words

5 words

2-letter words

4 words

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

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