Hole

  • 51hole*/*/*/ — [həʊl] noun [C] I 1) a space that has been dug in the surface of the ground Workers dug a 30 foot hole in the ground.[/ex] rabbit holes[/ex] 2) a space in the surface of something that goes partly or completely through it All my socks have holes… …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 52Hole (EP) — Infobox Album | Name = Hole EP Type = EP Artist = 65daysofstatic Released = 14 March 2005 Recorded = ??? Genre = Math rock Length = 24:31 Label = Monotreme Records Producer = ??? Reviews = *Drowned In Sound (8/10)… …

    Wikipedia

  • 53hole up — v. (colloq.) (D; intr., tr.) to hole up in (they were holed up in an old farmhouse) * * * [ həʊl ʌp] (colloq.) (D; intr., tr.) to hole up in (they were hole upd up in an old farmhouse) …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 54hole — n 1a. the anus or vagina. The word is barely a euphemism but a simple description of an orifice, in common use at least since Chaucer s Canterbury Tales (begun sometime in the later 1380s). ► Dark was the night as pitch or as coal and at the… …

    Contemporary slang

  • 55hole —    1. obsolete    to kill    The derivation is from the entry of the bullet or the excavation of the grave:     Keep yourself from being holed as they holed Mr Bingham the other day. (A. Trollope, 1885)    The modern cliché a hole in the head is… …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 56hole — noun 1) a hole in the roof Syn: opening, aperture, gap, space, vent, chink, breach, crack, rupture, puncture 2) a hole in the ground Syn: pit, crate …

    Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • 57hole up — also[hole in] {v.}, {slang} To take refuge or shelter; put up; lodge. * /After a day s motoring, Harry found a room for rent and holed up for the night./ * /The thief holed up at an abandoned farm./ * / Let s hole in, said Father as we came to a… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 58hole up — also[hole in] {v.}, {slang} To take refuge or shelter; put up; lodge. * /After a day s motoring, Harry found a room for rent and holed up for the night./ * /The thief holed up at an abandoned farm./ * / Let s hole in, said Father as we came to a… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 59hole — 1. noun /həʊl,hoʊl/ a) A hollow spot in a surface. Get some popcorn out of that popcorn bucket hole. b) An opening in a solid. There’s a hole in my bucket. 2. verb …

    Wiktionary

  • 60Hole — I. haule, hole fosse, vallée étroite Normandie. II. nf talus entre deux champs anc. fr. Var.: haule, holle, hollon; hollire : grand talus Ardennes; hôlaie : éminence de terrain Vosges. III. versant d un coteau Champagne. IV. hole, houle… …

    Glossaire des noms topographiques en France