Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sack (band), an Irish band; Sack (comics), a Marvel Comics villain; Sack (surname), a surname; Sack (unit), an English unit of weight or mass used for coal and wool; Sack (wine), a type of white fortified wine; Sack, Zurich, a village in the Swiss canton of Zurich; Sacks (surname) Sackcloth (Hebrew sak), a fabric mentioned in the Bible
Sack is an antiquated wine term referring to white fortified wine imported from mainland Spain or the Canary Islands. [1] There was sack of different origins such as: Canary sack from the Canary Islands, Malaga sack from Málaga, Palm sack from Palma de Mallorca, and; Sherris sack from Jerez de la Frontera.
The sack (abbreviation: sck. ) was an English unit of weight or mass used for coal [ 1 ] and wool . [ 2 ] It has also been used for other commodities by weight, commodities by volume, and for both weight and volume in the United States.
Sack is a five-piece Irish band, based in Dublin. To date the band has released three albums: You Are What You Eat , Butterfly Effect and Adventura Majestica . The band formed after the demise of Lord John White.
Sack made from hemp burlap Stacks of coffee bags, Ethiopia Potato sacks transported by horses in Colorado, 1890s. A gunny sack, also known as a gunny shoe, burlap sack, hessian sack or tow sack, is a large sack, traditionally made of burlap (Hessian fabric) formed from jute, hemp, sisal, or other natural fibres, usually in the crude spun form of tow.
Performing a sack is advantageous for the defending team as the offense loses a down, and the line of scrimmage retreats several yards. [2] Even better for the defense is a sack causing the quarterback to fumble the ball at or behind the line of scrimmage; this is also known as a strip sack and can result in a turnover if the defense manages to ...
A bag (also known regionally as a sack) is a common tool in the form of a non-rigid container, typically made of cloth, leather, bamboo, paper, or plastic. The use of bags predates recorded history , with the earliest bags being lengths of animal skin, cotton , or woven plant fibers, folded up at the edges and secured in that shape with strings ...
Jack Sack (1902–1980), American football player and coach; John Sack (1930–2004), American journalist; Jonathan Sacks (1948–2020), British Orthodox rabbi; Sibylle Kemmler-Sack (1934–1999), German chemist; Robert D. Sack (born 1939), American judge; Robert L. Sack (born 1942), American physician; Steve Sack (born 1953), American ...