Usually means: Attached or fastened using small nails.
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We found 19 dictionaries that define the word TACKED:

General (12 matching dictionaries)
  1. tacked: Merriam-Webster
  2. tacked: Collins English Dictionary
  3. tacked: Vocabulary.com
  4. Tacked, tacked: Wordnik
  5. tacked: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
  6. tacked: Wiktionary
  7. tacked: Dictionary.com
  8. tacked: Cambridge Essential American English Dictionary
  9. Tacked: Online Plain Text English Dictionary
  10. Tacked: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary
  11. tacked: FreeDictionary.org
  12. tacked: TheFreeDictionary.com

Business (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. tacked: Legal dictionary
  2. tacked: Financial dictionary

Computing (1 matching dictionary)
  1. tacked: Encyclopedia

Medicine (1 matching dictionary)
  1. tacked: Medical dictionary

Miscellaneous (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. Sound-Alike Words (No longer online)
  2. tacked: Idioms

Slang (1 matching dictionary)
  1. tacked: Urban Dictionary

(Note: See tack as well.)

Definitions from Wiktionary (Tack)

noun:  A small nail with a flat head.
noun:  A thumbtack.
noun:  (sewing) A loose seam used to temporarily fasten pieces of cloth.
noun:  (nautical) The lower corner on the leading edge of a sail relative to the direction of the wind.
noun:  (nautical) A course or heading that enables a sailing vessel to head upwind.
noun:  (figurative) A direction or course of action, especially a new one; a method or approach to solving a problem.
noun:  (nautical) The maneuver by which a sailing vessel turns its bow through the wind so that the wind changes from one side to the other.
noun:  (nautical) The distance a sailing vessel runs between these maneuvers when working to windward; a board.
noun:  (nautical) A rope used to hold in place the foremost lower corners of the courses when the vessel is close-hauled; also, a rope employed to pull the lower corner of a studding sail to the boom.
noun:  Any of the various equipment and accessories worn by horses in the course of their use as domesticated animals.
noun:  (manufacturing, construction, chemistry) The stickiness of a compound, related to its cohesive and adhesive properties.
noun:  Food generally; fare, especially of the bread kind.
noun:  That which is attached; a supplement; an appendix.
noun:  (obsolete) Confidence; reliance.
verb:  (transitive) To nail (something) with a tack (small nail with a flat head).
verb:  To sew/stitch with a tack (loose seam used to temporarily fasten pieces of cloth).
verb:  To weld with initial small welds to temporarily fasten in preparation for full welding.
verb:  (nautical) To maneuver a sailing vessel so that its bow turns through the wind, i.e. the wind changes from one side of the vessel to the other.
verb:  (intransitive, nautical) To sail to windward using a series of alternate tacks across the wind.
verb:  To add something as an extra item.
verb:  Synonym of tack up (“to prepare a horse for riding by equipping it with a tack”).
verb:  (slang, obsolete) To join in wedlock.
noun:  A stain; a tache.
noun:  (obsolete) A peculiar flavour or taint.
noun:  (colloquial) That which is tacky; something cheap and gaudy.
noun:  (law, Scotland and Northern England) A contract by which the use of a thing is set, or let, for hire; a lease.
noun:  A surname.
▸ Also see tack


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