sprack
See also: spräck
English
Etymology
From Middle English sprak, from Old Norse sparkr, sprekr (“lively”) and/or Old Norse sprækr (“lively”), from Proto-Germanic *sparkaz, *sprēkijaz, from Proto-Indo-European *sp(h)er(a)g- (“to strew, sprinkle”). More at spark.
Adjective
sprack (comparative more sprack, superlative most sprack)
- (UK, dialectal) lively, full of energy
- 1864, Jean Ingelow, chapter 1, in Studies for Stories: Emily's Ambition:
- She was apprenticed as a 'pupil teacher,' at fourteen years of age, and deemed to have a more than ordinary chance of doing well and getting on, for she was clever, and what is called 'sprack' in the part of the country where she lived.
Swedish
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