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haul
[ hawl ]
verb (used with object)
- to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag:
They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
- to cart or transport; carry:
The locomotive hauled freight over the Wasatch Mountains between Ogden, Utah, and Green River, Wyoming.
- to lower; cause to descend (often followed by down ):
As the students gathered around the flagpole, the school custodian hauled down the flag.
- to bring before an authority (often followed by before, in, to, into, etc.):
He was hauled before the judge.
She hauled me into the principal’s office.
verb (used without object)
- to pull or tug with force or effort:
The sailors hauled on the oars as hard as they could.
- to go or come to a place, especially with effort:
After much carousing in the streets, they finally hauled into the tavern.
- to cart or transport, or to move freight commercially:
Ours is one of many Canadian trucking companies hauling south of the border.
- Nautical.
- to sail, as in a particular direction:
They sailed to the west of Corsica, and then hauled south again.
- to draw or pull a vessel up on land, as for repairs or storage.
- (of the wind) to shift to a direction closer to the heading of a vessel ( veer ).
- (of the wind) to change direction, shift, or veer (often followed by round or to ):
During the early morning hours the wind hauled northward and increased in intensity, with accompanying heavy seas.
noun
- a strong pull or tug:
He felt a sudden haul on the other end of the rope.
- an act or instance of transporting something, or the load or quantity transported:
You have so little stuff to move, I can probably do it in two hauls with my pickup.
- the distance or route over which anything is transported or carried:
I’ve been using this truck for a year now on a weekly 30-mile haul.
- Fishing.
- the quantity of fish taken at one draft of the net:
We got such a huge haul of fish that we could hardly carry them home.
- the draft of a fishing net.
- the place where a seine is hauled.
- the act of taking or acquiring something, or something taken or acquired:
The thieves' haul included several valuable paintings.
- Digital Technology. a video, photo, or report of something taken or acquired:
He shops the flea markets over the weekend and then posts his haul on Monday afternoon.
verb phrase
- to bring before a superior for judgment or reprimand; call to account:
They were hauled up on a drug trafficking charge.
- to come to a halt; stop:
As night was falling we finally hauled up at an old farmhouse owned by a friendly couple.
- Nautical. to change the course of (a sailing vessel) so as to sail closer to the wind.
- Nautical. (of a sailing vessel) to come closer to the wind.
- Nautical. (of a vessel) to come to a halt.
- Nautical. to change a ship's course so as to get farther off from an object.
- to withdraw; leave.
- Informal. to draw back the arm in order to strike; prepare to deal a blow:
He hauled off and struck the insolent lieutenant a blow to the chin.
haul
/ hɔːl /
verb
- to drag or draw (something) with effort
- tr to transport, as in a lorry
- nautical to alter the course of (a vessel), esp so as to sail closer to the wind
- tr nautical to draw or hoist (a vessel) out of the water onto land or a dock for repair, storage, etc
- intr nautical (of the wind) to blow from a direction nearer the bow Compare veer 1
- intr to change one's opinion or action
noun
- the act of dragging with effort
- (esp of fish) the amount caught at a single time
- something that is hauled
- the goods obtained from a robbery
- a distance of hauling
a three-mile haul
- the amount of a contraband seizure
arms haul
drugs haul
- in the long haul or over the long haul
- in a future time
- over a lengthy period of time
Other Words From
- re·haul verb
- un·hauled adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of haul1
Idioms and Phrases
- haul around, Nautical.
- to brace (certain yards of a sailing vessel).
- (of the wind) to change in a clockwise direction.
- haul in with, Nautical. to approach.
- haul / shag ass, Slang: Vulgar. to get a move on; hurry.
More idioms and phrases containing haul
- long haul
- rake (haul) over the coals
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But as he bent down to stuff bills from a haul of more than $166,000 into bags, his hoodie rode up — exposing a star tattoo on his lower back.
He hauled in an acrobatic 28-yard catch over a defender, followed by a 27-yard reception that pushed the Chargers into Bengals territory.
He was hauled down short of the line but in the next phases Bhatti powered over to make it a 31-point game.
A review of the quarry’s haul reveals a long length of vertebrae from a single animal that connects the two and solves the riddle: Gnatalie, Chiappe confirms, is indeed a previously undiscovered species.
So far, the film is tracking for a solid opening weekend with a projected haul of $66 million, according to forecasting site Box Office Theory.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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