A fork of Rural Dictionary
something really good, pretty much addicting
reasonable doubt is straight crack, yo.
1. Smokeable cocain 2. A program to unlock trial versions of programs 3. "butt cleavage"
1. Avoid crack addicts 2. I downloaded a crack today. No way was I paying 200 bucks for that program! 3. When the plumber bends down you can see his crack.
a now obsolete adjective popular as a business buzzword among yuppies in the early eighties. It described a worker who was very smart and very fast-paced. This meaning of "crack" was forced out by the drug, crack, in the mid-eighties. Sort of like you can't say "gay" to mean "happy" anymore.
That was a good move to hire him; he's crack.
Another form of cocaine: 2 parts cocaine to one part baking soda, with a little water, heat gently until a precipitate forms: this is your crack
Why do cokeheads think they're better than crackheads?
The word originates from the Anglo-Saxon term, "crack" meaning fun. It possibly dates back as far as Old English or the older Scots dialect and is still used today by Ulster-Scots in Northern Ireland. Borrowed by the Gaelic Irish and spelt "craic", the term has been picked up by UK journalists in recent years and has re-entered the use of the word (Hiberno-English) in mainland UK. Dublin journalists in the 1970s frequently spelt the word as "crack" in written articles.
What's the crack? Aye it was good crack! To crack a joke
A small, illegal program who's sole purpose is to trick another program (by editting, imputting a registration key, or some other method) into thinking it has been registered.
I got a crack for Photoshop last night.