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tuck

Syllabification: (tuck)
Pronunciation: /tək/
Translate tuck | into French | into German | into Italian | into Spanish
Definition of tuck

verb

  • 1 [with object] push, fold, or turn (the edges or ends of something, especially a garment or bedclothes) so as to hide them or hold them in place:he tucked his shirt into his trousers
  • (tuck someone in) make someone, especially a child, comfortable in bed by pulling the edges of the bedclothes firmly under the mattress:he carried her back to bed and tucked her in
  • draw (something, especially part of one’s body) together into a small space:she tucked her legs under her
  • put (something) away in a specified place or way so as to be hidden, safe, comfortable, or tidy:the colonel was coming toward her, his gun tucked under his arm
  • 2 [with object] make a flattened, stitched fold in (a garment or material), typically so as to shorten or tighten it, or for decoration.

noun

  • 1a flattened, stitched fold in a garment or material, typically one of several parallel folds put in a garment for shortening, tightening, or decoration:a dress with tucks along the bodice
  • [usually with modifier] informal a surgical operation to reduce surplus flesh or fat:a tummy tuck
  • 2British informal food, typically cakes and candy, eaten by children at school as a snack: [as modifier]:a tuck shop
  • 3 (also tuck position) (in diving, gymnastics, downhill skiing, etc.) a position with the knees bent and held close to the chest, often with the hands clasped around the shins.

Phrasal Verbs

tuck something away

  • 1store something in a secure place:employees can tuck away a percentage of their pretax salary
  • (be tucked away) be located in an inconspicuous or concealed place:the police station was tucked away in a square behind the main street
  • 2 informal eat a lot of food.

tuck in (or into)

informal eat food heartily:I tucked into the bacon and scrambled eggs

Origin:

Old English tūcian 'to punish, ill-treat'; related to tug. Influenced in Middle English by Middle Dutch tucken 'pull sharply'

tuck in other Oxford dictionaries

Definition of tuck in the British & World English dictionary
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