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Answer for the clue "Understand, in hippie lingo ", 3 letters:
dig

Alternative clues for the word dig

Word definitions for dig in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Dig is a 2011 album by band Imaginary Johnny .

Usage examples of dig.

Aggregate admeasurement of six Aggregate admeasurement of six dug up and replanted.

Pirem handed over a coin before Ager could dig out any coppers from his purse.

The room had grown cold and Alec was crowding him off the bed against the wall, digging an elbow into the small of his back in the process.

Then, getting down on all fours, he began to crawl up, digging each pair of clamps into the flesh in turn to give him a grip.

The fabric of his trousers was silky and thin, and Ana could clearly see the outline of a pair of unappetiz-ingly small briefs digging into his fleshy buttocks.

Take up one of the large flagstones behind the annealing oven, and dig a hole underneath it in the ground.

Glumly he dug the large bottle out of his pocket, pried off the lid, and poured a fistful of antacid tablets into his palm.

During the day he sauntered about the Aoul or busied himself with some handicraft, but at night, when all was silent in the Aoul, he dug at the floor of the barn.

Of course, there was a lot about the Argyle treasures, old stuff that Clyde dug from the files in the newspaper morgue, but it all seemed new when given this timely twist.

They had blown fluff from a seedhead for camp chores: tonight Seri had to dig the jacks, and Aris had to take care of the fire.

I saw that the armadillo was trying to dig its way out through the kitchen cabinets, away from the light.

It is claimed that the giant armadillo is a veritable grave-robber and sometimes digs up dead bodies for the purpose of eating them.

There were also rumours and fairytales: of alien digs beneath the crust, evidence that the chasm had in some sense been artefactual, if not necessarily deliberate.

He stopped beside the hole Ath had dug and pulled something from a pocket.

Maiden Court had stood four-square to the wind since its first owner, a wild Norman nobleman, who had dug its first sod and had relished the battle to wrest its acres from the forest, had laid azide his battle dress and founded his family, and that was good enough for Harry.