Sacking in a sentence as a noun

He has done things that demand his sacking; after that, he can tell it to the judge.

Those responsible for sacking the people who have just been sacked have been sacked

If being rude and wrong were a sacking offence, hardly anybody would have a job.

For some, it means sacking every town and metaphoric sail away with all the gold.

To be fair, I fail to see what sacking a CEO has to do with a technologically negligent practice.

Apologies for the cynicism:A 'one year cliff' creates incentive for a sacking just inside a year.

> Explaining his sacking of Nutt, [Alan] Johnson wrote in a letter [...]That's the closest thing to an accidental Onion headline I've seen in a while.

Sometimes a sacking is the appropriate course of action, but that's not for the mob to decide, because the mob doesn't have anything like close access to the story.

He clearly wasn't competent to sort out the team, and resorted to sacking you, rather doing what any employee should do in such a situation - calling in his boss to sort things out.

Obviously, this is not to say that all central-asians are responsible for sacking Baghdad or that all blacks are responsible for the destruction of Detroit.

When music makes these geographical leaps it is shorn of its sociocultural context and meaning, leading to the sacking of old sacred grounds and the sanctification of new ones.

It was disheartening to me to see people rally to her on Twitter and immediately cry for the sacking of GitHub before any facts or concrete allegations were made by anyone involved, her especially.

It's every bit as true as saying, "White people played a role in the 1906 Atlanta riots" or "Mongols played a role in the sacking of Baghdad in 1258" or "Irish played a major role in the degeneracy of New York's five points in the 1850's".

If not a sacking of the country by terrorist hoards, what exactly are you proposing the parallels between the fall of Rome and our modern society will be?I can envision terrorist attacks doing major irreversible damage to our society, but only through the fear, spiraling out of control, that they have the potential to cause.

Sacking definitions

noun

coarse fabric used for bags or sacks

See also: bagging

noun

the termination of someone's employment (leaving them free to depart)

See also: dismissal dismission discharge firing liberation release sack