rack out

rack out
in. to go to sleep or to bed. (See also rack.)
What time do you rack out?
I’ve got to rack out or drop from exhaustion.
If I don’t rack by midnight, I’m dead the next day.

Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions. 2015.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • rack out — v To sleep. I am going to rack out for two hours. 1950s …   Historical dictionary of American slang

  • rack out — vb American to lie down and/or go to sleep. An expres sion now used principally by teenagers and college students, but which origi nates in the armed service slang noun rack, meaning bed …   Contemporary slang

  • rack out — Canadian Slang Go to sleep, or take a nap/ lie down. see rock out with your cock out …   English dialects glossary

  • rack-out — …   Useful english dictionary

  • rack — rack1 rackingly, adv. /rak/, n. 1. a framework of bars, wires, or pegs on which articles are arranged or deposited: a clothes rack; a luggage rack. 2. a fixture containing several tiered shelves, often affixed to a wall: a book rack; a spice rack …   Universalium

  • rack — 1. n. a bed. □ I need some more time in the rack. □ You don’t get to see the rack very much in the army. 2. Go to rack (out). 3. n. a pair of [female] breasts. (Usually objectionable.) □ Look at the rack on that …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • rack — I. n American 1. a bed. This use of the word is probably of armed service origin. 2. female breasts ► She s attractive great rack, nipples like pencil erasers... (Disclosure, US film, 1995) II. See: rack out …   Contemporary slang

  • Rack railway — track using the Lamella system rack …   Wikipedia

  • Rack — Rack, n. [Probably fr. D. rek, rekbank, a rack, rekken to stretch; akin to G. reck, reckbank, a rack, recken to stretch, Dan. r[ae]kke, Sw. r[ a]cka, Icel. rekja to spread out, Goth. refrakjan to stretch out; cf. L. porrigere, Gr. ore gein.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Rack block — Rack Rack, n. [Probably fr. D. rek, rekbank, a rack, rekken to stretch; akin to G. reck, reckbank, a rack, recken to stretch, Dan. r[ae]kke, Sw. r[ a]cka, Icel. rekja to spread out, Goth. refrakjan to stretch out; cf. L. porrigere, Gr. ore gein.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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