Find the word definition

Crossword clues for hardman

Wiktionary
hardman

n. 1 (context slang English) A man who is particularly tough or muscular 2 (context Australia rugby English) A rugby player

Wikipedia
Hardman

Hardman may refer to:

  • Hardman (surname)
  • Hardman, Oregon, a community in Wheeler County
  • Hardman, West Virginia
Hardman (surname)

Hardman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Ben Hardman, Australian politician
  • Bill Hardman, American jazz trumpeter
  • Brian Hardman, New Zealand footballer
  • Cedrick Hardman, American football player
  • Chris Hardman, English singer-songwriter
  • Christine Appleby née Hardman, character in Coronation Street soap opera
  • Christine Hardman, Archdeacon of Lewisham & Greenwich
  • E. Chambré Hardman, Irish photographer
  • Dave Hardman, Pornographic actor
  • David Hardman, British politician
  • Derek Hardman, American football player
  • Donald Hardman, Senior RAF commander
  • Edward Hardman, Irish geologist
  • Frederick Hardman, English journalist and novelist
  • Harold Hardman, English footballer
  • Ian Hardman, English rugby league player
  • Isabel Hardman, English political journalist
  • Karl Hardman, American horror film producer
  • Lamartine Griffin Hardman, American politician
  • Lee Hardman, American football coach
  • Leslie Hardman, Rabbi and British Army chaplain
  • Lewis Hardman, English footballer
  • Mary Juliana Hardman, English nun
  • May Hardman, character in Coronation Street soap opera
  • Peter Hardman, English racing driver
  • Richard Frederick Paynter Hardman, British geologist
  • Sean Hardman, Australian rugby union player
  • Shirley Hardman, New Zealand sprinter
  • Tom Hardman, English cricketer
  • Zoe Hardman, British television presenter

Usage examples of "hardman".

I just want to say thanks for agreeing to speak with us at Hardman, Sergeant.

William, but I can forget publishing anything else from the interview in Hardman Magazine.

Even in a village as small as Langstone, she pointed out, not everyone was to be trusted, and Widow Hardman said with delightful humour could have been a spy.

Mary was exceeding open with them, not overawed one whit by their presence and proximity, and she set out by explaining what Widow Hardman had meant by her earliest remarks.

John is not twenty years yet, Ma Hardman had but three but spread them out.

In the village there were three men they were introduced to they knew them by their first names only, Bob, George and Joe and also John Hardman, the nearest neighbour, who was a thin, intense young man with burning eyes and an air of impatience bordering on violent.

John Hardman, who had brought him there, had told him some of what had happened, and suggested he should keep his distance and make do with hearsay.

So Sam had gone to Hardman and made a bribe, and the bait had been snapped up.

The death of Hardman made their plan for them, because whatever else, they knew he had been loved.

The Widow Hardman, he recalled, had lost two sons already in most awful circumstances, two of her three, and now the last was dead, hanged at a crossroads like a most vicious criminal.

The Hardman house, he saw before they all dismounted, was closed and shuttered up.

John Hardman was more determined and more foolhardy than most, and looked to you for help, maybe.

The sight of Yorke and Hardman lived with them quite fresh enough to make them determined that some sort of justice should be done, and would most likely be through their actions, even if the hidden men, as was so normal, got away with it.

John Hardman at the oak-tree crossroads but realised quickly that Sir A feared equally for both of them, so tried to bite it off.

And throughout my times with Mary Broad, and Hardman, and the Bartrams, they would never venture any names.