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harl
1/ hɑːl /
harl
2/ hærl; hɑːl /
verb
- tr to drag (something) along the ground
- intr to drag oneself; trail along
- tr to cover (a building) with a mixture of lime and gravel; roughcast
- intr to troll for fish
noun
- the act of harling or dragging
- a small quantity; a scraping
- a mixture of lime and gravel; roughcast
Derived Forms
- ˈharling, noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of harl1
Example Sentences
But with a cavernous memory and a zeal for efficiency that he had cultivated at the helm of radio shows like the “Jack Frost Melody Moments,” Ormandy could go from Albéniz to Yardumian, from his own, tellingly gaudy transcriptions of Bach and Handel to the works of American contemporaries, Philadelphians like Harl McDonald, Louis Gesensway and Vincent Persichetti among them.
Kate Harl said her restaurant, the Bean Inn in St Ives, Cornwall, would be operating at a "greatly reduced capacity" due to the delay and her ability to earn would be "severely restricted".
“We have had more than 100 positions open since the start of the year, and just recently we increased sign-on bonuses to $1,200 for hourly positions -– in-part because we are competing with an entity that can print its own money -– the federal government -– and its $300 per week additional unemployment benefit,” said CEO Rod Harl.
“We have had more than 100 positions open since the start of the year, and just recently we increased sign-on bonuses to $1,200 for hourly positions -– in-part because we are competing with an entity that can print its own money -– the federal government -– and its $300 per week additional unemployment benefit,” said CEO Rod Harl.
On a recent chilly Sunday at Riverside Park, Tyler Harl, 34, wore a brown hoodie as he descended the terraced landscape.
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