0 past simple and past participle of sack
1 to remove someone from a job, usually because they have done something wrong or badly, or sometimes as a way of saving the cost of employing them:
He got sacked from his last job.
They sacked her for being late.
2 in American football, to attack the quarterback in order to prevent him from throwing the ball:
The quarterback was sacked only once and completed 16 out of 23 passes.
3 to attack a building or town, causing a lot of destruction and stealing many valuable things:
Toyota received criticism for the manner in which the process was carried out; for example, deploying security guards to escort sacked staff.
He also proposed that the government compensate the three sacked judges since reinstatement of the three dismissed is no longer possible.
During this period, many begin calling for the judiciary or government to review the decision against the sacked judges.
The activists and protesters have reiterated their demands for the sacked ministers to be investigated.
Furthermore, a supine nation was more desirable than a sacked one.
In the middle distance, another mle of humanitarian disaster unfolds, and the background is an uneven display of sacked, burning settlements and scorched earth.
Plant workers demanded the restoration of sacked by threatening to plant administration with cessation of work and the mass strike.
Meanwhile, sickness absence among the sacked guards rose to six times the normal levels, resembling sick-out strike action.