hawse
English
Etymology
Alteration of Middle English halse, from Old Norse hals (“neck”) (compare Icelandic háls (“neck”)).[1]
Noun
hawse (plural hawses)
Adjective
hawse (not comparable)
Adverb
hawse (not comparable)
Derived terms
Derived terms
- athwart hawse
- bold hawse
- clearing hawse
- in the hawse
- foul the hawse
- "freshen hawse"
- hawse-bags
- hawse-blocks
- hawse-bolster
- hawse-fallen
- hawse-full
- hawsehole, hawse-hole
- hawse-hook
- hawse-pieces
- hawsepipe, hawse-pipe
- hawse-plug
- hawse-timber
- hawse-wood
Verb
hawse (third-person singular simple present hawses, present participle hawsing, simple past and past participle hawsed)
- (intransitive, nautical, of a vessel) To lie uneasily to an anchor, typically due to a weather tide.
Anagrams
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