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Origin and history of whack
whack(v.)
"strike sharply, give a heavy blow to," 1719, colloquial, probably of imitative origin. The noun, "vigorous stroke, as with a stick" is from 1737. The word in out of whack (1885) is perhaps the slang meaning "share, just portion" (1785), which may be from the notion of the blow that divides, or the rap of the auctioneer's hammer.
To have (or take) a whack at something "make an attempt" is by 1820 (with have), 1845 (with take). Wack or whack "crazy person," 1938, is probably a back-formation from wacky, which probably comes from the blow-on-the-head verb. Related: Whacked; whacking. Whacked as "tired exhausted" is by 1919; whacked out "crazy," especially from drugs or drink, is by 1969.
Wack, whack in the slang sense of "unappealing; crazy," hence "worthless, stupid" is by 1986, apparently popularized by an anti-drug slogan crack is wack.
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