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English Idioms :: hill
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hilrious.html - See: GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE FENCE or GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE HILL, HEAD FOR THE HILLS. |
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English Idioms :: hilt
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hilrious.html - See: TO THE HILT or UP TO THE HILT. |
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Traditional English :: hila
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hilrious.html - pl. of HILUM. |
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Traditional English :: hilarious
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hilrious.html - adj. 1 exceedingly funny. 2 boisterously merry. hilariously adv. hilariousness n. hilarity n. [L hilaris f. Gk hilaros cheerful] |
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Traditional English :: Hilary term
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hilrious.html - n. Brit. the university term beginning in January, esp. at Oxford. [Hilarius bishop of Poitiers d. 367, with a festival on 13 Jan.] |
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Traditional English :: hill
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hilrious.html - n. & v. --n. 1 a a naturally raised area of land, not as high as a mountain. b (as the hills) Anglo-Ind. = hill-station. 2 (often in comb.) a heap; a mound (anthill; dunghill). 3 a sloping piece of road. --v.tr. 1 form into a hill. 2 (usu. foll. by up) bank up (plants) with soil. hill and dale (of a gramophone record) with groove-undulations in a vertical plane. hill-billy (pl. -ies) US 1 colloq., often derog. a person from a remote rural area in a southern State (cf. HICK). 2 folk music of or like that of the southern US. hill climb a race for vehicles up a steep hill. hill-fort a fort built on a hill. hill-station Anglo-Ind. a government settlement, esp. for holidays etc. during the hot season, in the low mountains of N. India. old as the hills very ancient. over the hill colloq. 1 past the prime of life; declining. 2 past the crisis. up hill and down dale see UP . [OE hyll] |
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