Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Huzzah ", 4 letters:
hail

Alternative clues for the word hail

Word definitions for hail in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. precipitation of ice pellets when there are strong rising air currents enthusiastic greeting

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. Balls or pieces of ice falling as precipitation, often in connection with a thunderstorm. vb. 1 (context impersonal English) Said of the weather when hail is falling. 2 (context transitive English) to send or release hail Etymology 2 (context ...

Usage examples of hail.

Orange was hailed with approbation and delight by the Catholic leaders, those promoted by Adrets excited such a storm of indignation, among the Huguenots of all classes, that he shortly afterwards went over to the other side, and was found fighting against the party he had disgraced.

Tsar whom, just a few years before, they had been hailing in adulatory terms for his intention to bring an end to serfdom.

The hillside, which had appeared to be one slope, was really a succession of undulations, so that the advancing infantry alternately dipped into shelter and emerged into a hail of bullets.

Instinctively we fall flat on our stomachs and wait for the hail of stones which tear a few holes in our aerofoil, but we are unscathed.

The chaplain hailed him, and the turncoat to whom he had not yet been introduced arose expectantly, but the Nomad went straight to their hobbled horses.

All the rest waits for the appearing of the king to hail him for himself, not a being of accident and happening but authentically king, authentically Principle, The Good authentically, not a being that acts in conformity with goodness--and so, recognisably, a secondary--but the total unity that he is, no moulding upon goodness but the very Good itself.

Two storms, Baas, not one, and when they meet they will begin to fight and there will be plenty of spears flying about in the sky, and then both those clouds will weep rain or perhaps hail.

Gore was a newcomer in the League ranks, he hailing from New Bedford, but he soon made for himself a name, being a first-class fielder and a batsman that was away above the average, as is shown by his record made in after years.

At first they tried to hail it, thinking it was Bobber, but then realized it was just the dinghy they had set adrift.

Father Duptulski gave me ten Hail Marys, something that struck me as a reasonable punishment for an accomplice, a mere bridesmaid in crime.

The hail and buffeting became even worse for several moments, then they broke into misty clear air at twelve hundred feet and it subsided, wisps of thin cloud and flakes of snow bursting past them, the frozen Baltic below.

He hailed the native man cheerily, then paused, with the calabash in his hand, to give him a keen glance.

They lowered sail and came towards me, and on their hailing me I asked for a man to take us to the opposite point of the island.

The Hail Wolf got a chiefdom for his trouble, and Iss drew BlackHail into the war.

The barbiturates, hailed not so long ago as panaceas, have given place to Chlorpromazine, Reserpine, Frenquel and Miltown.