Wacky vs Hacky - What's the difference?
wacky | hacky |
Of a person or their behaviour, zany.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=May 15
, author=Scott Tobias
, title=Film: Reviews: The Dictator
, work=The Onion AV Club
Like a hack; amateurish.
(Geordie) Filthy or totally dirty.
(computing, informal) Using, or characterised by, hacks: poorly designed workarounds.
(colloquial) Short and interrupted, broken, jerky; hacking.
As adjectives the difference between wacky and hacky
is that wacky is of a person or their behaviour, zany while hacky is like a hack; amateurish.As a noun wacky
is alternative form of lang=en.wacky
English
Etymology 1
Adjective
(er)citation, page= , passage=Though the idea of placing wacky made-up characters in a real-life context was carried over from Da Ali G Show—wherein Buzz Aldrin was once asked if he was upset that Michael Jackson got all the credit for inventing the moonwalk—Sacha Baron Cohen’s Borat felt like something new, an attempt to square an improvised, guerrilla style of underground comedy with reality-TV stunt shows like Jackass or Fear Factor. }}
Synonyms
* eccentric, zanyDerived terms
* wack * wacky baccy * wackyparse, wackyparsingEtymology 2
Noun
hacky
English
Adjective
(er)- A hacky''' cough. A '''hacky''' laugh. A '''hacky''' breath. A '''hacky howl.
Derived terms
* hackilyReferences
* * * * “hacky” at Wordnik (Forwards to “hacking”, where “hacky” is listed.)