hole
verb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L331921 on Wikidata ↗noun
- opening in the surface of an object
- formed when water pours over the top of a submerged object, or underwater ledges, causing the surface water to flow back upstream toward the object
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /həʊl/ / [hɔʊɫ] / /hɒl/
adj
- Obsolete spelling of whole.
“Such was the arrangement of the alphabet over the hole North.”
- Misspelling of whole.
name
Etymology: Various origins: * English topographic surname for someone who lived by a depression, from Old English holh (“hole”), from Proto-West Germanic *hulwī, from Proto-Germanic *hulwiją. * Borrowed from Norwegian Hole, a habitational surname from Old Norse hóll (“round hill, mound”). * Shortened form of Dutch van Hole, a habitational surname from hol (“hole, depression, cavity”).
- A surname.
noun
Etymology: Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *hulaz Proto-Germanic *hulą Proto-West Germanic *hol Old English hol Middle English hole English hole Inherited from Middle English hole, hol, from Old English hol (“orifice, hollow place, cavity”), from Proto-West Germanic *hol (“hole”), from Proto-Germanic *hulą (“hollow space, cavity”), noun derivative of Proto-Germanic *hulaz (“hollow”), which is of uncertain ultimate origin. Related to hollow. Cognate with Dutch, Faroese, and Icelandic hol (“hole”), Danish hul (“hole”), Faroese, Icelandic, and Norn hola (“hole”), Norwegian Bokmål hol (“depression, hole, cavern”), Swedish hål (“hole”), French houle (“swell of water”). Compare unrelated Finnish kolo (“hole”).
- A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; a dent; a depression; a fissure.
“I made a blind hole in the wall for a peg. I dug a hole and planted a tree in it.”
“To be called into a huge sphere, and not to be seen to move in't, are the holes where eyes should be, which pitifully disaster the cheeks.”
- An opening that goes all the way through a solid body, a fabric, etc.; a perforation; a rent.
“There’s a hole in my shoe. Her stocking has a hole in it.”
“The priest took a chest, and bored a hole in the lid.”
- In games.
- In games.
“I played 18 holes yesterday. The second hole today cost me three strokes over par.”
- In games.
“The shortstop ranged deep into the hole to make the stop.”
- In games.
- In games.
- In games.
- An excavation pit or trench.
- A weakness; a flaw or ambiguity.
“I have found a hole in your argument.”
“But between the drinks and subtle things / The holes in my apologies, you know / I’m trying hard to take it back”
- In semiconductors, a lack of an electron in an occupied band behaving like a positively charged particle.
- A security vulnerability in software which can be taken advantage of by an exploit.
- Any bodily orifice.
“Just shut your hole!”
- Any bodily orifice.
- Any bodily orifice.
- Solitary confinement, a high-security prison cell often used as punishment.
“In late December a Washington State prisoner was involved in a scuffle with a guard who was trying to take him into the hole.”
“Disciplinary actions can range from a mere write up to serious time in the hole.”
- An undesirable place to live or visit.
“His apartment is a hole!”
“I have often heard people say, "One can't live upon a view," and I have heard some of the most beautiful places called "awful holes," simply because of the monotonous lives led in them.”
- Difficulty, in particular, debt.
“If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.”
“"Don't you see the hole it has put me into? […] Of course it was too late to have any alteration printed on the first night and now Miss Roscastle is the draw of the piece.”
- A chordless cycle in a graph.
- A passing loop; a siding provided for trains traveling in opposite directions on a single-track line to pass each other.
“We’re supposed to take the hole at Cronk and wait for the Limited to pass.”
- A mountain valley.
“Jackson Hole”
verb
Etymology: Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *hulaz Proto-Germanic *hulą Proto-West Germanic *hol Old English hol Middle English hole English hole Inherited from Middle English hole, hol, from Old English hol (“orifice, hollow place, cavity”), from Proto-West Germanic *hol (“hole”), from Proto-Germanic *hulą (“hollow space, cavity”), noun derivative of Proto-Germanic *hulaz (“hollow”), which is of uncertain ultimate origin. Related to hollow. Cognate with Dutch, Faroese, and Icelandic hol (“hole”), Danish hul (“hole”), Faroese, Icelandic, and Norn hola (“hole”), Norwegian Bokmål hol (“depression, hole, cavern”), Swedish hål (“hole”), French houle (“swell of water”). Compare unrelated Finnish kolo (“hole”).
- To make holes in (an object or surface).
“Shrapnel holed the ship's hull.”
- To destroy.
“She completely holed the argument.”
- To go into a hole.
“Good master Picklock, with your worming brain, And wriggling engine-head of maintenance, Which I shall see you hole with very shortly! A fine round head, when those two lugs are off, To trundle through a pillory!”
- To drive into a hole, as an animal, or a billiard ball or golf ball.
“If the player holes the red ball, he scores three, and upon holing his adversary's ball, he gains two; and thus it frequently happens, that seven are got upon a single stroke, by caramboling and holing both balls.”
“Woods holed a standard three foot putt”
- To cut, dig, or bore a hole or holes in.
“to hole a post for the insertion of rails or bars”