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Interlinked
Dictionary© based on
Merriam-Webster's
Collegiate® Dictionary (m-w.com)
and Star
Dictionary
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hike,
hiked,
hiking,
hikes.verbs
intransitive
verb use.to
go on an extended walk for pleasure or exercise; to rise, especially to
rise upward out of place (my coat had hiked up in the back)
transitive
verb use.to
increase or raise in amount, especially abruptly (shopkeepers who hiked
their prices just before tourist season); to pull or raise with a sudden
motion (hiked myself over the fence; hiked up her knee socks); in football,
to snap the ball
hike.noun,.plural.hikes
a long walk or march;
an often abrupt increase or rise
(a price hike)
hiker.noun,.plural.hikers
hippopotamus.noun,.plural.hippopotamuses
or.hippopotami
a large, chiefly.aquatic
African herbivorous.mammal
(Hippopotamus amphibius) having thick, dark, almost hairless skin, short
legs with four toes and a broad, wide-mouthed muzzle
hoist,
hoisted,
hoisting,
hoists.verbs
transitive verb use.to
raise or haul up with or as if with the help of a mechanical.apparatus;
lift
intransitive verb use.to
become raised or lifted
hoist.noun,.plural.hoists
an apparatus for lifting
heavy or cumbersome.objects;
the act of hoisting; a lift
hoister.noun,.plural.hoisters
huddle.noun,.plural.huddles
a densely.packed.group
or crowd, as of people or animals;
in football, a brief.gathering
of a team's players behind the line of scrimmage
to receive instructions for the next play
huddle,
huddled,
huddling,
huddles.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
crowd together, as from cold or fear; to draw or curl one's limbs close
to one's body; crouch; in football, to gather in a huddle
transitive verb use.to
cause to crowd together; to draw oneself together in a crouch
huddler.noun,.plural.huddlers
held.verb
past
tense.and.past
participle.of
hold
hold,
held,
holding,
holds.verbs
transitive verb use.to
have and keep in one's grasp (held
the cup of coffee); to keep from departing or getting away (hold the bus!
someone else is coming; hold the dog until I find the leash); to retain
the attention or interest of (the storyteller held the crowd enthralled;
the driver held the bus so the person running to it would be able to get
on)
intransitive verb use.to
maintain a grasp or grip on something; to stay securely fastened (the chain
held); to maintain a desired or accustomed position or condition (she hopes
the weather will hold)
hold fast,.holds
fast.verbs
stick to firmly (will this
wallpaper adhere to the wall?)
holdfast.noun,.plural.holdfasts
any of various.devices
used to fasten something securely
hold water.verb
if you say that something
doesn't hold water, you mean it doesn't make sense and is ridiculous
, won't withstand wear, criticism, etc. (the theory of evolution just doesn't
'hold water' because it won't stand up to empirical
methods of examination and logic
hold.noun,.plural.holds
the lower interior part
of a ship or an airplane in which cargo
is stored
hag.noun,.plural.hags
an old woman considered
ugly
or frightful
haggish.adjective
haggishly.adverb
haggishness.noun,.plural.haggishnesses
haggis.noun,.plural.also
haggis
Scottish
dish consisting of a mixture of the minced heart, lungs, and liver of a
sheep or calf mixed with suet, onions,
oatmeal and seasonings and boiled in the stomach of the slaughtered animal
hero.noun,.plural.heroes
a hero is one receiving.admiration
from those recognizing he
lives by character.qualities.consistent
with higher principles of human
interaction
(many books, plays, films and stories depict
heroes, such as Robin Hood); a protagonist;
a man of God endowed with great
courage and strength, celebrated for his bold exploits
as were Elijah, Elisha, David, etc.; a person noted for feats
of courage or nobility of purpose;
a person, such as Nassim Haramein noted for special achievement in a particular
field
heroine.noun,.plural.heroines
a woman noted
for courage and daring action, such as were Joan of Arc and other fine
women; a woman noted for special achievement
in a particular.field
Heilstrom.(a
German word pronounced HIGH-L shtrome)
the spiritual force of divine
love from God, also called the power of God, that causes help and healing
in an individual's life (the Heilstrom lights up one's soul with the love
of God); also called by Bruno Gröning
the 'healing wave' and 'divine force' and also known as the power of the
good God, the power of the Holy
Spirit, etc. ("What you feel when you
take in the Heilstrom, is good."....Greta
Häusler. "Receive something new, receive
your health, absorb the Heilstrom, this divine wave and don't disturb it.
You will disturb it if you mentally concern yourself with your illnesss,
always thinking yourself back to your suffering or your pain or even falling
into a state of doubt."....Bruno
Gröning.
heal,
healed,
healing,
heals.verbs
transitive verb use.to
restore
to health or soundness; cure; to
set right (many miraculous healings continue to occur today, called miraculous
because we lack an understanding of how the mind works that can make a
person whole again; see the Grand
Self movie and the subject on healing);
to make whole; repair
(healed the rift between us)
intransitive verb use.to
become whole and sound; return to health
healable.adjective
from Middle
English 'healen', from Old
English 'hoelan'
health.noun,.plural.healths
the overall.condition
of an organism (how is her
health doing?) wholeness;
soundness
of body and mind; freedom from disease
or abnormality; being
in a condition of optimal.well-being;
healthy,
healthier,
healthiest.adjectives
possessing
good health; conducive to good
health; healthful (healthy air returns when the poisonous chemtrails leave);
that which is indicative of
sound,
rational.thinking
or frame of mind (a healthy
attitude);
sizable; considerable (a
healthy portion of potatoes; a
healthy raise in salary)
healthily.adverb
healthiness.noun
healthful.adjective
contributive
to good health
healthfully.adverb
healthfulness.noun
Hispanic.adjective
of.or.relating.to
Spain or Spanish speaking Latin America, its people, its culture
Hispanic.noun,.plural.Hispanics
a Spanish speaking person
or resident of Latin-American or of Spanish descent
hexapla.noun,.plural.hexaplas
an edition of a book containing
six versions or texts in parallel.columns,
such
as the edition of the Old
Testament.compiled
by Origen during 1600-10 CE;
a sixfold text in parallel columns, especially of the Old Testament
Holy Spirit.proper
noun
the spirit of wholeness, meaning completely high
consciousness in the heart; the emotions and beingness of God,
expressed as us when aligned with
God; word 'holy'
Hebrew.noun,.plural.Hebrews
a member
of these people in ancient times; the language traditionally
used by the people of Israel
which anciently split into two
nations, that of Israel and Judah,
whose people were called those of the tribe of Judah or Judeans (the so-called
Jews
were entirely a different group, an evil group calling themselves 'Jews'
to hide amongst the Judeans in order to carry on their evilnesses)
Hebrew.adjective
House of Representatives
the Lower
House of the Congress in
the U.S.A and of most state legislatures;
was akin to its British model;
the House of Lords initially
was the more powerful of the two houses, but over the centuries its powers
gradually diminished
hydrostatic.noun,.plural.hydrostatics.also.hydrostatical.adjective
of.or.relating.to
hydrostatics; the branch of physics
that deals with fluids at rest
and under.pressure
hydrostatically.adverb
hush,
hushed,
hushing,
hushes.verbs
transitive verb use.to
make silent or quiet;
to calm; soothe;
to suppress.mention.of
(tried to hush up the older kids from waking the baby)
intransitive verb use.to
be or become silent or still
hush.noun,.plural.hushes
a silence
or stillness
hush.adjective
silent; quiet
hitch,
hitched,
hitching,
hitches.verbs
transitive verb use.to
fasten
or catch.temporarily
with or as if with a loop,
hook
or noose; to connect
or attach,
as
to a vehicle (hitched the horses
to the sleigh); to move or raise
by pulling or jerking (hitch up
one's suspenders); to hitchhike
(hitched a ride into town)
intransitive verb use.to
move haltingly; hobble;
to get married (got hitched at the resort); to hitchhike
hitch.noun,.plural.hitches
any of various.knots
used as a temporary fastening;
a device used
to connect one thing to another;
an impediment or a delay
(waiting for the tire repair truck caused
a hitch in our plans); a free ride obtained along a road
hitcher.noun,.plural.hitchers
hitchhike,
hitchhiked,
hitchhiking,
hitchhikes.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
travel
by soliciting free rides along
a road with one's thumb or some
kind of written sign
transitive verb use.to
solicit or get a free ride along a road
hitchhike.noun,.plural.hitchhikes
hitchhiker.noun,.plural.hitchhikers
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