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sac (n.)
"biological pocket or receptacle," 1741, from French sac, from Latin saccus "bag" (see sack (n.1)). English sack for "a sack-like part of the body" is from mid-14c.
Sac
central Algonquian people who lived near the upper Mississippi before the 1832 Black Hawk War, from French Canadian Saki, probably a shortened borrowing of Ojibwa (Algonquian) /osa:ki:/, literally "person of the outlet" (of the Saginaw River, which itself contains their name, and means literally "in the Sac country").
updated on October 31, 2021
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Dictionary entries near sac
Sabra
sabre
Sabrina
sabulous
sac
Sac
Sacagawea
saccade
saccharin
saccharine
sacerdotal