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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hitched

Hitch \Hitch\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Hitched; p. pr. & vb. n. Hitching.]

  1. To hook; to catch or fasten as by a hook or a knot; to make fast, unite, or yoke; as, to hitch a horse, or a halter; hitch your wagon to a star.

  2. To move with hitches; as, he hitched his chair nearer. To hitch up.

    1. To fasten up.

    2. To pull or raise with a jerk; as, a sailor hitches up his trousers.

    3. To attach, as a horse, to a vehicle; as, hitch up the gray mare. [Colloq.]

Wiktionary
hitched

vb. (en-past of: hitch)

WordNet
Wikipedia
Hitched

Hitched (New Zealand TV Series) is a New Zealand Reality TV show filmed by Cream Media and broadcast by TV3 following couples behind the scenes on the journey towards the biggest day of their lives, their wedding.

How do couples today celebrate their union, is Marriage still religious, a Rite of passage, expression of love and commitment or an excuse for a party?

In reality, weddings can be an expensive, stressful and sometimes a traumatic affair. There can be tremendous pressure for everything to be just perfect, but what is a perfect wedding?

Hitched Season 1, screened Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at 8pm on TV3.

Hitched Season 2, screened Tuesday, April 13 at 8pm on TV3.

Usage examples of "hitched".

Expecting to have to climb before they fought, the troopers had had their weapons sheathed and their baldrics hitched up and around, so that the swords hung between their shoulder-blades.

Annixter hitched his horse to the iron post in front of this building, and tramped up to the second floor, letting himself into an office where a couple of clerks and bookkeepers sat at work behind a high wire screen.

I must repeat that the most eminent doctors had not one bit better explanation for the causes of epidemics than the ignorant Russian villagers who hitched the town widows to their plows.

He looked out to the blue sierras to the south and he hitched up the shoulder strap of his overalls and sat with his thumb hooked in the bib and turned and looked at them.

Brother Stevens, having hitched his horse at the public rack, pushed his way to the postoffice, he had no small crowd to set aside.

Karigan selfconsciously hitched the slipping swordbelt into its proper place.

His sneer intensified and he hitched his swordbelt forward and closed his right hand about the wire-wound hilt.

Of Seven Cities blood, the Guards had hitched their round shields and unsheathed their tulwars, waving the broad, curving blades threateningly at the Wickans, who answered with barking challenges.

I left her to this uncozy decor and went outside again to where my chaser still patiently stood hitched to the railing.

So I hitched myself to a Kanawl bote, there bein two other hosses hitcht on also, one behind and anuther ahead of me.

Perhaps they had hitched their painted cannon to their ox teams, stowed the canister in its limbers and buggered off northwards?

Yet the journey was easier than I had feared, and on the outskirts I hitched a ride with a gang of pipeline technicians returning from the north, using them as cover to enter Cuvier.

Behind him stood a gleaming, dark blue 1936 Pierce Arrow berline (sedan body with a divider window) that was hitched to a 1936 Pierce Arrow Travelodge house trailer painted a matching color.

Then a team of the big, lumbering creatures that Julian had dubbed bigfoots were brought out, hitched as if they were pulling a cart.

So they hitched Gilwyn's library cart to a pair of geldings given to them by Breck and headed south, first to Farduke and then on to Dreel, carefully avoiding the Principality of Nith.