The term sacked (literally to place in a sack or bag) has more than one idiomatic use.
Historical warfare
To "sack" a city was to plunder its contents. The city of Rome was famously sacked by the Visigoths in 410 AD, ending the Western Roman Empire, and also in 1527 AD by mutinous troops of the Papal States.
Employment
The term "sacked" means fired, or terminated.
US football
Applied to an attempted pass play in football, it means that the quarterback was tackled behind the line of scrimmage, sometimes for a significant loss of yardage. The term was coined by Los Angeles Rams defensive end David "Deacon" Jones, who likened it to sacking and pillaging a city.
by being mean.
from when the barbarians sacked rome ultimately destroying it
No way just because he missed the ball doesnt mean he should be sacked.
If you mean the one up to 2010,then she got sacked.
411, one year after the visigoths sacked Rome.
well you see... when Ur was sacked, he died. Most people think Ur was not sacked, but BALL sacked. i hope this helps. have a nice day. :)
It's an old term from the trade-guild era. When you got dismissed, you put your tools in a sack and left.
appeal upheld. no proof no witnesses and stil sacked
You can be sacked from almost any job without committing any crime. But a criminal conviction would likely mean termination for a social worker.
The Gauls sacked and destroyed the city of Rome in 476.
Yes it's bad to get sacked jeez
QBs for the Detroit Lions were sacked 52 times in the 2008 season. Jon Kitna was sacked 15 times, Dan Orlovsky and Daunte Culpepper were sacked 14 times each, Drew Stanton was sacked 6 times, and Drew Henson was sacked 3 times.