Verb
A book fell off the shelf and thwacked me on the head. thwacked the growling dog on the nose with a rolled-up newspaperNoun
he gave the ball a hard thwack with the bat and sent it deep into the outfield
even from the top of the bleachers we could hear the loud thwack of the ball being hit
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Verb
Modern readers may take heart in the fact that there are many excellent critics thwacking through the slop—albeit with freelance machetes, on newfangled platforms.—Brittany Allen, Literary Hub, 27 Apr. 2026 The back door flung open, then thwacked shut.—Lizz Schumer, PEOPLE, 20 Jan. 2026
Noun
But for four days this spring, my group of four -- long-
time pals with handicaps ranging from the respectable to the delusional --
replaced that stillness with the metallic thwack of driver on ball and the
inevitable groan that follows yet another shank or water-hazard donation.—David Weiss, Forbes.com, 27 Apr. 2026 There’s something unnerving about the mundane thwack of the rhythms.—Andrew Ryce, Pitchfork, 27 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for thwack