Posted February 10, 2016
If you live long enough, you learn something new!
From the Wictionary...
hork (third-person singular simple present horks, present participle horking, simple past and past participle horked)
(computing, slang) To foul up; to be occupied with difficulty, tangle, or unpleasantness; to be broken.
I downloaded the program, but something is horked and it won't load.
(slang, regional) To steal, especially petty theft or misnomer in jest.
Can I hork that code from you for my project?
(slang) To vomit, cough up.
(slang) To throw.
Let's go hork pickles at people from the back row of the movie theatre.
(slang) To eat hastily or greedily; to gobble.
I don't know what got into her, but she horked all those hoagies last night!
(slang, transitive) To move; specifically in an egregious fashion
Go hork the kegs from out back, and then go to the party across the street and hork some girls back.
From the Wictionary...
hork (third-person singular simple present horks, present participle horking, simple past and past participle horked)
(computing, slang) To foul up; to be occupied with difficulty, tangle, or unpleasantness; to be broken.
I downloaded the program, but something is horked and it won't load.
(slang, regional) To steal, especially petty theft or misnomer in jest.
Can I hork that code from you for my project?
(slang) To vomit, cough up.
(slang) To throw.
Let's go hork pickles at people from the back row of the movie theatre.
(slang) To eat hastily or greedily; to gobble.
I don't know what got into her, but she horked all those hoagies last night!
(slang, transitive) To move; specifically in an egregious fashion
Go hork the kegs from out back, and then go to the party across the street and hork some girls back.
Post edited February 10, 2016 by tritone