Shack
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the Liverpool band, see Shack (band).
Image:Rundown Shack.jpg A shack is a type of small house that is in disrepair. The word may derive from the Nahuatl (Aztec) word xacalli or "adobe house" by way of Mexican Spanish xacal/jacal, which has the same meaning as "shack"[1]. It was a common usage among people of Mexican ancestry throughout the U.S. southwest from the 19th century if not earlier.
In Australia, shacks were originally holiday homes located on crown land such as along river banks (especially the Murray River) or near beaches. They were roughly built as they were likely to get washed away in floods, and had no legal title on the land they were built on. Now, a lot of the shack owners have freehold title to their land, and are subject to building codes to reduce the risk of damage or injury from floods and storms. Many are now quite grand holiday homes. The New Zealand equivalent is called a bach.
In South Africa, shacks (also referred to as "mikhukhu" [2] ) are a common form of accommodation for the millions of people living in townships (see Township (South Africa)) and informal settlements most commonly found in or around urban areas, particularly on the outskirts of larger cities.
In amateur radio jargon, a shack refers to the place where an amateur radio operator's radio sending and receiving apparatus is located and operated. The term originally meant that part of a ship where the radio apparatus was located and operated.
In military aviation jargon, a "shack" refers to a successful, direct hit on a ground target.


