sock

sock
1 3 noun (C)
1 a piece of clothing made of soft material that you wear on your foot inside your shoe: a pair of cotton socks
2 give sb/sth a sock informal to hit someone or something very hard, especially with your hand closed
3 pull your socks up BrE informal to make an effort to improve your behaviour or your work: If you don't pull your socks up, you'll fail the exam.
4 put a sock in it BrE informal used to tell someone in a joking way to stop talking
5 knock sb's socks off AmE informal to surprise someone very much: When I saw all the people there, it knocked my socks off!
2 verb (T)
1 informal to hit someone very hard: He socked the intruder on the jaw.
2 sock it to sb old-fashioned to tell someone something in a direct and forceful way: Go on, sock it to him!
sock in phrasal verb (T) AmE be socked in if an airport, road, or area is socked in, it is very difficult to see far because of bad fog, snow, or rain

Longman dictionary of contemporary English. 2004.

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  • sock — ► NOUN 1) a knitted garment for the foot and lower part of the leg. 2) an insole. 3) informal a hard blow. ► VERB informal ▪ hit forcefully. ● knock (or blow) someone s socks off Cf. ↑knock …   English terms dictionary

  • Sock — es una expresión que, literalmente, significa acción rápida o violenta, y que se aplicó, especialmente en la época del jazz tradicional y el Swing a una determinada forma de ejecutar los temas, potente y arrolladora (Sock Style). En este mismo… …   Wikipedia Español

  • sock — sock1 [säk] n. [ME socke < OE socc < L soccus, type of light, low heeled shoe < Gr sukchis, prob. of Phrygian orig.; akin to Avestan haxa , sole of the foot] 1. a light shoe worn by comic characters in ancient Greek and Roman drama 2.… …   English World dictionary

  • Sock — Sock, n. [OE. sock, AS. socc, fr. L. soccus a kind of low heeled, light shoe. Cf. {Sucket}.] 1. The shoe worn by actors of comedy in ancient Greece and Rome, used as a symbol of comedy, or of the comic drama, as distinguished from tragedy, which… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Sock — (s[o^]k), v. t. [Perh. shortened fr. sockdolager.] To hurl, drive, or strike violently; often with it as an object. [Prov. or Vulgar] Kipling. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Sock — Sock, n. [F. soc, LL. soccus, perhaps of Celtic origin.] A plowshare. Edin. Encyc. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Sock in — Sock in, v. t. to cause (an airport) to cease functioning, by severe weather conditions, such as fog or a snowstorm. Used often in the passive; the airport was socked in for two days by a blizzard. [PJC] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • sock it to — ► sock it to informal make a forceful impression on. Main Entry: ↑sock …   English terms dictionary

  • sock — [n/v] hit hard beat, belt, bop, buffet, chop, clout, cuff, ding, nail, paste, punch, slap, smack, smash, soak, whack; concept 189 Ant. tap …   New thesaurus

  • sock|er|oo — «SOK uh ROO», noun. U.S. Slang. a smash hit; smasheroo; socko …   Useful english dictionary

  • sock|et — «SOK iht», noun, verb. –n. 1. a hollow part or piece for receiving and holding something. A candlestick has a socket in which to set a candle. A light bulb is screwed into a socket. 2. a connecting place for electric wires and plugs: »Please plug …   Useful english dictionary

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