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    hijack
    /ˈhʌɪdʒak/

    verb

    • 1. unlawfully seize (an aircraft, ship, or vehicle) in transit and force it to go to a different destination or use it for one's own purposes: "a man armed with grenades hijacked the jet yesterday"

    noun

    • 1. an incident or act of hijacking: "an unsuccessful hijack attempt"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. HIJACK definition: 1. to take control of an aircraft or other vehicle during a journey, especially using violence: 2…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of HIJACK is to steal (goods in transit) by stopping a vehicle. How to use hijack in a sentence.

  4. hijack. (haɪdʒæk ) Word forms: plural, 3rd person singular present tense hijacks , present participle hijacking , past tense, past participle hijacked. 1. verb. If someone hijacks a plane or other vehicle, they illegally take control of it by force while it is travelling from one place to another.

  5. To hijack a vehicle is to take it over illegally. Such a crime is called a hijack or a hijacking. Hijack can be used more generally to mean “take over.” If your friend has a bad habit of interrupting other people to talk about himself, you can say that he tends to hijack the conversation.

  6. Hijack definition: to steal (cargo) from a truck or other vehicle after forcing it to stop. See examples of HIJACK used in a sentence.

  7. hijack something to use violence or threats to take control of a vehicle, especially a plane, in order to force it to travel to a different place or to demand something from a government. The plane was hijacked by two armed men on a flight from London to Rome.

  8. hijack. verb. /ˈhaɪdʒæk/. Verb Forms. hijack something to use violence or threats to take control of a vehicle, especially a plane, in order to force it to travel to a different place or to demand something from a government The plane was hijacked by two armed men on a flight from Miami to San Juan.

  9. 1. If someone hijacks a plane or other vehicle, they illegally take control of it by force while it is traveling from one place to another. [...] 2. If you say that someone has hijacked something, you disapprove of the way in which they have taken control of it when they had no right to do so. [disapproval] [...] More. Conjugations of 'hijack'

  10. Definitions of 'hijack' 1. If someone hijacks a plane or other vehicle, they illegally take control of it by force while it is travelling from one place to another. [...] 2. If you say that someone has hijacked something, you disapprove of the way in which they have taken control of it when they had no right to do so. [disapproval] [...] More.

  11. 1. a. To seize control of (a vehicle such as an airplane or bus) by use of force, especially as a way of reaching an alternate destination or as an act of terrorism. b. To kidnap (a person in a vehicle): people who have experienced the trauma of being hijacked. c. To stop and rob (a vehicle in transit). d.