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Answer for the clue "Hearty and healthy ", 4 letters:
hale

Alternative clues for the word hale

Word definitions for hale in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. (context archaic English) health, welfare. Etymology 2 sound, entire, healthy; robust, not impaired. Etymology 3 v To drag, pull, especially forcibly.

Usage examples of hale.

David Hale had made to Susan McDougal after allegedly being pressured by Clinton.

Hale displayed his three military-issue IDs, two of them unique to this event and delivered to attendees just two days ago.

Volk wird zu ihm halten, auch wenn unsere Aufgabe auf Jahre hinaus nicht leicht sein wird.

So up anchor and take your rotten carack back to whatever port of dreams you hale from.

The plants are incredibly lush and hale and sometimes threaten to block off the whole easement from dining to living room, and the rope-handled Brazilian machete C.

He was born at Hales, or Hailles, in Gloucestershire towards the end of the twelfth century, and died at Paris at the convent of his Order in 1245.

After a half deck of Blind Tiger, four blue octagons, and three squirts from an amdex haler, his eyeballs were threatening to revolve but he was on his feet and motoring.

The haler prisoners raised a cheer to see the motte-and-bailey still holding out, a cheer the knights on its rampart echoed.

Krispos and his generals questioned haler survivors, trying to sift fragments of order from catastrophe.

He sat on the back steps of the Hale house, lazily picking his guitar, and when the supper was ready, he pushed the children of the household out of the way and served himself a big meal, although there had been barely enough hoecakes and white meat to go round.

Gilchrist was in the little waiting room, hale and hearty, wearing an NHS face mask, rolling up his sleeve in preparation for the inoculation a nurse was holding.

Grandfather Nutter was a hale, cheery old gentleman, as straight and as bald as an arrow.

This birthing had been difficult, for the child was large and his wife was no longer young, but the new babe was hale and lusty, if disappointingly unlike Sief in appearance.

Hale wrote Helen, and at the end of the series he still was enthusiastic.

Hale back at his home in Roxbury thought of Helen separated from her Teacher and wrote her a tender, understanding letter: I could not talk to you yesterday nearly as much as I wanted to, but I do want to congratulate you with all my heart and soul and strength as to the possibilities for you which I see in the new marriage, and I long to say that you have gained a brother and not lost a sister.