Whack vs. Wack

Difference Between Whack and Wack
Whackverb
To strike (someone or something) with a sharp blow; slap.
Wacknoun
A person regarded as eccentric.
Whackverb
(Slang) To kill deliberately; murder.
Wackadjective
Very bad
walked out of a really wack movie.Whackverb
To deal a sharp, resounding blow.
Wackadjective
Annoyingly or disappointingly bad, in various senses; lousy, cringy, uncool, messed up.
Every record they ever made was straight-up wack.Whacknoun
A sharp, swift blow.
Wacknoun
An eccentric; an oddball; a weirdo.
Whacknoun
The sound made by a sharp, swift blow.
Wacknoun
.
Whacknoun
The sound of a heavy strike.
Wacknoun
A friendly term of address.
Whacknoun
The strike itself.
Whacknoun
The stroke itself, regardless of its successful impact.
Whacknoun
An attempt, a chance, a turn, a go, originally an attempt to beat someone or something.
C'mon. Take a whack at it.40 bucks a whack.Whacknoun
A share, a portion, especially a full share or large portion.
Whacknoun
A whack-up: a division of an amount into separate whacks, a divvying up.
Whacknoun
A deal, an agreement.
It's a whack!Whacknoun
The backslash, {{⟨ \ ⟩.}}
del c:\WINDOWS\system32Whackverb
To hit, slap or strike.
Whackverb
(slang) To kill, bump off.
Whackverb
To share or parcel out; often with up.
to whack the spoils of a robberyWhackverb
(sports) To beat convincingly; to thrash.
Whackverb
To surpass; to better.
Whackadjective
alternative form of wack||crazy
That's whack, yo!Whacknoun
the sound made by a sharp swift blow
Whacknoun
the act of hitting vigorously;
he gave the table a whackWhackverb
hit hard;
The teacher whacked the boy