tack
n. C / Un. a way of doing something or a direction you take to reach a goal. It is often used when you change your plan to try a different method.
n. a course of action or a specific approach to a situation, often one that differs from a previous strategy. In a nautical context, it refers to the direction of a ship relative to the trim of its sails.
The government decided to try a different tack to lower inflation.
When the initial negotiations failed, the legal team decided to change tack and focus on a settlement instead.
Realizing that aggressive questioning was yielding no results, the detective changed tack, adopting a more sympathetic tone to encourage the witness to speak freely.
From Middle English tak, takke (“hook; staple; nail”), from Old Northern French taque (“nail, pin, peg”), from Frankish takkō, from Proto-Germanic takkô (“tip; point; protrusion; prong; tine; jag; spike; twig”), of unknown origin, but possibly from Proto-Indo-European dHgʰ-n-, from the root déHgʰ- (“to pinch; to tear, rip, fray”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian Takke (“bough; branch; twig”), West Frisian takke (“branch”), tûk (“branch, smart, sharp”), Dutch tak (“twig; branch; limb”), German Zacke (“jag; prong; spike; tooth; peak”).
From Middle English takken (“to attach; nail”), from the noun (see above).
From an old or dialectal form of French tache. See techy. Doublet of tache.
Back-formation from tacky.
From Middle English tak, take (“fee, tax (on livestock)”), from Old Norse tak, taka (“a taking, seizure; revenue”), from Old Norse taka (“to take”). Cognate with Scots tack.
Commonly used in the idiomatic phrase 'to change tack'.
change tactchange tackLearners often confuse 'tack' (a direction or course) with 'tact' (sensitivity in social situations) in this idiom.