The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hyne \Hyne\, n.
A servant. See Hine. [Obs.]
--Chaucer.
Usage examples of "hyne".
Something struck his outstretched arm and, turning, he saw the loose ends of the Hyne cables writhing Medusa-like in the airless void.
Kilmartin that he could muzzle Hynes for the moment because he intended to give Hynes exclusive if the Bourke thing came to anything.
I used Hynes because I had the local nabob, Tom Russell, slam a door in my face here.
Credit to a journalist by the name of Hynes, co-written with another one.
Kilmartin had had Hynes barred from the headquarters of the Murder Squad after a spat between them.
Still, Hynes had not taken it badly, and Kilmartin and he maintained a relationship which occasionally bordered on the civil.
He even looked aloof, leaning back in his chair across from Hynes, as if trying to keep him at a distance.
Price holding in her Arms her newborn Baby, swearing under Oath that Tom Hynes is the Father.
Mr Hynes took off his hat, shook it and then turned down the collar of his coat, displaying, as he did so, an ivy leaf in the lapel.
He nodded curtly to Mr Hynes and sat down on the chair which the old man vacated.
Mr Hynes laughed and, shoving himself away from the mantelpiece with the aid of his shoulders, made ready to leave.
Arlene had taken advantage of the Hynes operation somewhat later in life than had the others.
I met Mary Hynes at the cross of Kiltartan, And I fell in love with her then and there.
It is Mary Hynes, this calm and easy woman, Has beauty in her mind and in her face.
I asked a man I met one day, when I was looking for a pool na mna Sidhe where women of faery have been seen, bow Raftery could have admired Mary Hynes so much f he had been altogether blind?