flak
English
Alternative forms
- flack (adverse criticism and spokesperson senses)
Etymology
Borrowed from German FlaK, short for Fliegerabwehrkanone (“anti aeroplane cannon”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /flæk/
- Rhymes: -æk
- Homophone: flack
Noun
flak (countable and uncountable, plural flaks)
- Ground-based anti-aircraft guns firing explosive shells. [from 1938]
- 1964, David John Cawdell Irving, The Destruction of Dresden, page 74,
- […] to consider whether the city was in February 1945 an undefended city within the meaning of the 1907 Hague Convention, it will be necessary to examine the establishment and subsequent total dispersal of the city's flak batteries, before the date of the triple blow.
- 2007, Samuel W. Mitcham, Jr., Retreat to the Reich: The German Defeat in France, 1944, footnote, page 30,
- He was promoted to general of flak artillery on March 1, 1945, and ended the war as the general of the flak arm at OKL, the High Command of the Luftwaffe.
- 1964, David John Cawdell Irving, The Destruction of Dresden, page 74,
- Anti-aircraft shell fire. [from 1940]
- Synonym: ack-ack
- 1943 November 29, Target: Germany, in Life, page 80,
- At 1057 we were just over the islands and at 1100 the tail gunner reported flak at six o'clock, below.
- 1984, Steve Harris, "Aces High", Iron Maiden, Powerslave.
- There goes the siren that warns of the air raid / Then comes the sound of the guns sending flak / Out for the scramble we've got to get airborne / Got to get up for the coming attack.
- 1999, Brian O'Neill, Half a Wing, Three Engines and a Prayer, page 118,
- I could hear the fragments from the flak shells hitting the plane like someone throwing rocks at it.
- (figuratively, informal) Adverse criticism. [from 1963]
- 1990, Joel H. Spring, The American School, 1642-1990, page 380,
- This filter Herman and Chomsky call “flak,” which refers to letters, speeches, phone calls, and other forms of group and individual complaints. Advertisers and broadcasters avoid programming content that might cause large volumes of flak.
- (informal) A public-relations spokesperson.
- 2006, Edward Herman, Noam Chomsky, A Propaganda Model, in 2006 [2001], Meenakshi Gigi Durham, Douglas Kellner (editors), Media and Cultural Studies: Keyworks, revised edition, page 277,
- AIM head, Reed Irvine's diatribes are frequently published, and right-wing network flaks who regularly assail the “liberal media,” such as Michael Ledeen, are given Op-ed column space, sympathetic reviews, and a regular place on talk shows as experts.
- 2006, Edward Herman, Noam Chomsky, A Propaganda Model, in 2006 [2001], Meenakshi Gigi Durham, Douglas Kellner (editors), Media and Cultural Studies: Keyworks, revised edition, page 277,
Translations
ground-based anti-aircraft guns firing explosive shells
anti-aircraft shell fire
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adverse criticism
a public-relations spokesperson
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See also
Albanian
Etymology
From Proto-Albanian *awa-laka, from Proto-Indo-European *lek- (“to jump, scuttle”) (compare Norwegian dialect lakka ‘to hop, patter about’, Latvian lèkt (“to spring, jump”), Ancient Greek ληκάω (lēkáō, “to dance to music”).[1]
Verb
flak (first-person singular past tense flaka, participle flakur)
Related terms
References
- Orel, Vladimir (2000) A Concise Historical Grammar of the Albanian Language, Leiden: Brill, page 2
Icelandic
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /flaːk/
- Rhymes: -aːk
Declension
Synonyms
- (wreck): rekald n
- (a fish fillet): flak af fiski n
Derived terms
Norwegian Bokmål
Derived terms
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /flɑːk/
Derived terms
- isflak
- snøflak
Polish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /flak/
audio (file)
Noun
flak m inan
Declension
Related terms
Swedish

De sitter på flaket

Bil med flak
Noun
flak n
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