English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English tocraken (to cause a cracking sound by breaking something with a lot of force; to fracture), from Old English cracian (to make a cracking sound, crack), from Proto-Germanic *krakōną (to crack, crackle, shriek), equivalent to to- +‎ crack.

Verb edit

tocrack (third-person singular simple present tocracks, present participle tocracking, simple past and past participle tocracked)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To crack, fracture, fissure; to break with a cracking sound. [from the early 14th c. to the late 15th c.]
    The mighty warrior all tocracked that heathen's skull with one blow of his mighty club.

References edit