The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ruck \Ruck\, v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. Rucked; p. pr. & vb. n.
Rucking.] [Icel hrukkast to wrinkle, hrukka wrinkle, fold.]
To draw into wrinkles or unsightly folds; to crease; as, to
ruck up a carpet.
--Smart.
Wiktionary
vb. (present participle of ruck English)
Usage examples of "rucking".
She squirmed backward, the granite edge rough against her belly, rucking up the sweatshirt.
This guy is as mad as a rucking hatter, and he thinks that he can play with the stupid policeman.
I felt a rucking motion in space following it, something moving below the skin of the world, disappearing into the tunnel after the slake-moth.
Meanwhile her guardian was busy rucking up the legs of the bloomers and drawers beneath to expose the shapely, plump round thighs in their sheer silken sheaths, and lone wailed and squirmed over the dome, her magnificent young bosom in erratic upheaval.
I can hack her fucking ears off and ram this knife in her rucking gullet!
As the gathered nobles spoke the response to Sisels words, four guardsman stepped forward and slid two long poles through the coffins handles, rucking the embroidered head of the Eddon wolf on the covering cloth so that its snarl seemed to turn to a look of confusion, then lifted the coffin and carried it to the door of the chapel.
I've never taken a contract for some rucking barstid like Hitler or any other politician I thought was buggering up his country.
I should have killed them to spare them the pain of trying to live on rucking forints and zlotys.
He sheathes the knife, rucking the length of spruce into the pack lying on the stone beside him.