rackety

English

Etymology

From racket +‎ -y.

Adjective

rackety (comparative racketier, superlative racketiest)

  1. (informal) Making a racket; noisy.
    • 2007 January 10, Patricia Leigh Brown, “An Author’s Vision of the Mean Streets of Mumbai”, in New York Times[1]:
      The book’s initial germ was a rackety shootout not far from Mr. Chandra’s family’s co-op.
  2. (informal) Involving, or characteristic of, a criminal racket.
    • Andreas Sofroniou, Cyprus, Permanent Deprivation of Freedom (page 73)
      The fact that the major European countries consider Cyprus to be a rackety semi-gangster society made it madness ever to allow the island to join the Eurozone, rather than an excuse, as now, for stealing its citizens' money.

Derived terms