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		Ask for help > What does it mean: to take a cackle?     
			
		 What does it mean: to take a cackle? 
		
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 kafsia
 
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							| What does it mean: to take a cackle? 
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							| Help me :) |  31 May 2012      
					
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 IbuLulu
 
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							| I �ve never heard someone say  �take a cackle �, but to cackle is to laugh (in a way that reminds you of a chicken!) |  31 May 2012     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| I agree with IbuLulu, but I love the phrase. Right, I �m off now - off  to take a good cackle! |  31 May 2012     
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| Well, that �s new to me as well. Since Australian, British, and American English speakers never heard the expression before, I think it �s safe to say that "to take a cackle" is neither standard nor widespread slang. Personally, "cackle" is more the laugh of the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz (1939). |  31 May 2012     
					
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 Jackie1952
 
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							| As a native speaker, I too have never heard the expression. |  31 May 2012     
					
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 Zora
 
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							| Could you perhaps mean "take a crack at"? It does sound very similar to take a cackle. 
 Take a crack at means to try to do something, usually difficult.
 
 I �m going to take a crack at solving this puzzle.
 I �m going to take a crack at painting the house today.
 
 PS: to have a cackle - means to have a laugh, or chatter about something
 
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 cunliffe
 
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							| Also, to have a crack at.. |  31 May 2012     
					
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 millmo
 
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							| witches cackle when they laugh |  31 May 2012     
					
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