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racket
1[rak-it]
noun
a loud noise or clamor, especially of a disturbing or confusing kind; din; uproar.
The traffic made a terrible racket in the street below.
social excitement, gaiety, or dissipation.
an organized illegal activity, such as bootlegging or the extortion of money from legitimate business people by threat or violence.
a dishonest scheme, trick, business, activity, etc..
the latest weight-reducing racket.
Usually the rackets organized illegal activities.
Some say that the revenue from legalized gambling supports the rackets.
Slang.
an occupation, livelihood, or business.
an easy or profitable source of livelihood.
verb (used without object)
to make a racket or noise.
to take part in social gaiety or dissipation.
racket
2[rak-it]
noun
a light bat having a netting of catgut or nylon stretched in a more or less oval frame and used for striking the ball in tennis, the shuttlecock in badminton, etc.
the short-handled paddle used to strike the ball in table tennis.
(used with a singular verb), rackets, racquet.
a snowshoe made in the form of a tennis racket.
racket
1/ ˈrækɪt /
noun
a noisy disturbance or loud commotion; clamour; din
gay or excited revelry, dissipation, etc
an illegal enterprise carried on for profit, such as extortion, fraud, prostitution, drug peddling, etc
slang, a business or occupation
what's your racket?
music
a medieval woodwind instrument of deep bass pitch
a reed stop on an organ of deep bass pitch
verb
rare, to go about gaily or noisily, in search of pleasure, excitement, etc
racket
2/ ˈrækɪt /
noun
a bat consisting of an open network of nylon or other strings stretched in an oval frame with a handle, used to strike the ball in tennis, badminton, etc
a snowshoe shaped like a tennis racket
verb
(tr) to strike (a ball, shuttlecock, etc) with a racket
Other Word Forms
- racketlike adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of racket1
Origin of racket2
Word History and Origins
Origin of racket1
Origin of racket2
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But according to law enforcement authorities, being locked up hasn’t stopped him from running drug and protection rackets in his old neighborhood.
For years, it was WASPy, long-legged girls, with a tennis racket over one shoulder and a touch-me-not attitude.
Federal authorities alleged Landa-Rodriguez set his eyes on a racket far more lucrative than prison drug deals.
The total fines, issued by tournament referee Jake Garner, included $30,000 for unsportsmanlike conduct and another $12,500 for racket abuse.
He was docked $30,000 for unsportsmanlike behaviour and another $12,500 for obliterating a racket against a chair.
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