Kitchen drawer hack that was really impressive.

hack1 hak/Submit verb verb: hack; 3rd person present: hacks; past tense: hacked; past participle: hacked; gerund or present participle: hacking 1. cut with rough or heavy blows. "hack off the dead branches" synonyms: cut, chop, hew, lop, saw; slash "Stuart hacked the padlock off" 2. use a computer to gain unauthorized access to data in a system. "they hacked into a bank's computer" gain unauthorized access to (data in a computer). "hacking private information from computers" 3. informal manage; cope. "lots of people leave because they can't hack it" synonyms: cope, manage, get on/by, carry on, come through, muddle along/through; More stand it, tolerate it, bear it, endure it, put up with it; informalhandle it, abide it, stick it out "he tried to run his own commercial fishing outfit, but he couldn't hack it" noun noun: hack; plural noun: hacks 1. a rough cut, blow, or stroke. "he was sure one of us was going to take a hack at him" (in sports) a kick or hit inflicted on another player. a cut or gash. a tool for rough striking or cutting, e.g., a mattock or a miner's pick. 2. informal an act of computer hacking. a piece of computer code providing a quick or inelegant solution to a particular problem. "this hack doesn't work on machines that have a firewall" Origin

Old English haccian ‘cut in pieces’; related to Dutch hakken and German hacken . hack2 hak/Submit noun noun: hack; plural noun: hacks 1. a writer or journalist producing dull, unoriginal work. "a hack scriptwriter" synonyms: journalist, reporter, newspaperman, newspaperwoman, writer; More informaljourno, scribbler; archaicpenny-a-liner "a tabloid hack" a person who does dull routine work. synonyms: drudge, menial, menial worker, factotum; informalgofer "office hacks" 2. a horse for ordinary riding. a good-quality lightweight riding horse, especially one used in the show ring. a ride on a horse. an inferior or worn-out horse. a horse rented out for riding. 3. NORTH AMERICAN a taxicab. verb verb: hack; 3rd person present: hacks; past tense: hacked; past participle: hacked; gerund or present participle: hacking 1. ride a horse for pleasure or exercise. Origin

Middle English (sense 2 of the noun): abbreviation of hackney. Sense 1 of the noun dates from the late 17th century. hack3 hak/Submit noun noun: hack; plural noun: hacks 1. FALCONRY a board on which a hawk's meat is laid. 2. a wooden frame for drying bricks, cheeses, etc. a pile of bricks stacked up to dry before firing. Origin

late Middle English (denoting the lower half of a divided door): variant of hatch1.

FUCKING LEARN TO USE THE WORD RIGHT

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