jerk

See also: Jerk

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /d͡ʒɜːk/
  • (US) IPA(key): /d͡ʒɝk/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)k

Etymology 1

Probably from Middle English yerk (sudden motion) and Middle English yerkid (tightly pulled), from Old English ġearc (ready, active, quick) and Old English ġearcian (to prepare, make ready, procure, furnish, supply). Cognate with Scots yerk (to jerk). Related also to English yare (ready).

Alternative forms

Noun

jerk (plural jerks)

  1. A sudden, often uncontrolled movement, especially of the body.
  2. A quick tug or shake.
    When I yell "OK," give the mooring line a good jerk!
  3. (originally Canada, US, slang, derogatory) A person with unlikable or obnoxious qualities and behavior, typically mean, self-centered, or disagreeable; an arsehole.
    I finally fired him, because he was being a real jerk to his customers, even to some of the staff.
    You really are a jerk sometimes.
  4. (US, slang, derogatory) A stupid person; an idiot or fool.
  5. (weightlifting) A lift in which the weight is taken with a quick motion from shoulder height to a position above the head with arms fully extended and held there for a brief time.
  6. (slang) An act of male masturbation.
  7. (preceded by definite article) A dance, popular in Western culture in the 1960s, in which the head and upper body is thrown forwards regularly to the beat of the music.
    • 1964, “The Jerk”, Don Julian (lyrics), performed by The Larks:
      Girls, hey, what's that you're doing
      Girl, girl, what's that you're doing
      You got to show me the steps to it
      Somehow, gonna learn how to do it
      Doing the jerk
      Hey, do the jerk
      Girl, come on and work
      Hey, do the jerk.
  8. (physics, engineering) The rate of change in acceleration with respect to time.
  9. (US, obsolete) A soda jerk.
Usage notes
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations


The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
See also

Verb

jerk (third-person singular simple present jerks, present participle jerking, simple past and past participle jerked)

  1. (intransitive) To make a sudden uncontrolled movement.
    • [1877], Anna Sewell, “A Strike for Liberty”, in Black Beauty: [], London: Jarrold and Sons, [], →OCLC, part II, page 106:
      York came to me first, whilst the groom stood at Ginger's head. He drew my head back and fixed the rein so tight that it was almost intolerable; then he went to Ginger, who was impatiently jerking her head up and down against the bit, as was her way now.
  2. (transitive) To give a quick, often unpleasant tug or shake.
  3. (US, slang, vulgar) To masturbate.
  4. (obsolete) To beat, to hit.
  5. (obsolete) To throw with a quick and suddenly arrested motion of the hand.
    to jerk a stone
  6. (usually transitive, weightlifting) To lift using a jerk.
  7. (obsolete) To flout with contempt.
Derived terms
Translations
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

See also

Etymology 2

From American Spanish charquear, from charqui, from Quechua ch'arki.

Noun

jerk (uncountable)

  1. (Caribbean, Jamaica) A rich, spicy Jamaican marinade.
    • 2016, Fodor's Essential Caribbean, Fodor's Travel, →ISBN:
      Sunshine ranks high in the island's greates burger debate, while the chicken egg rolls with mango chutney and jerk mayo and fabulous fish tacos elevate pub grub to an art.
  2. (Caribbean, Jamaica) Meat (or sometimes vegetables) cured by jerking, in which it is coated in spices and slow-cooked over a fire or grill traditionally composed of green pimento wood positioned over burning coals; charqui.
    Jerk chicken is a local favorite.
Translations

Verb

jerk (third-person singular simple present jerks, present participle jerking, simple past and past participle jerked)

  1. To cure (meat) by cutting it into strips and drying it, originally in the sun.
    Synonym: jerky
    • 1954, Wallace Stegner, Beyond the Hundredth Meridian: John Wesley Powell and the Second Opening of the West, Houghton Mifflin, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 37:
      Snow stalled him in the timber; his food was all but gone when he managed to kill an antelope and jerk a supply of venison.
    • 2011, Dominic Smith, Bright and Distant Shores, page 106:
      The Lemakot in the north strangled widows and threw them into the cremation pyres of their dead husbands. If they defeated potential invaders the New Irish hanged the vanquished from banyan trees, flensed their windpipes, removed their heads, left their intestines to jerk in the sun.
    • 2016, Fodor's Travel Guides, Fodor's Essential Caribbean, Fodor's Travel, →ISBN:
      This longtime West End eatery prepares chicken the way locals like it: curried, fried, jerked, and baked.
Translations

French

Etymology

From English.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dʒɛʁk/

Noun

jerk m (plural jerks)

  1. jerk (dance)

Further reading

Lower Sorbian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *jьkrà.

Noun

jerk m inan

  1. roe

Further reading

  • Muka, Arnošt (1921, 1928) “jerk”, in Słownik dolnoserbskeje rěcy a jeje narěcow (in German), St. Petersburg, Prague: ОРЯС РАН, ČAVU; Reprinted Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag, 2008
  • Starosta, Manfred (1999) “jerk”, in Dolnoserbsko-nimski słownik / Niedersorbisch-deutsches Wörterbuch (in German), Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag

Manx

Verb

jerk (verbal noun jerkal, past participle jerkit)

  1. to expect

Mutation

Manx mutation
RadicalLenitionEclipsis
jerkyerkn'yerk
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.
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