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A Writer's Dictionary:

hatches Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with H » hasping ... have a feel for something » hatches


hatch1
noun hatches
    1. A door covering an opening in a ship's deck.
    2. A hatchway.
    3. A door in an aircraft or spacecraft.
    4. An opening in a wall between a kitchen and dining-room, used especially for serving food.
      Form: serving hatch (also)
    5. The lower half of a divided door.
    6. A flood-gate or sluice.
Idiom: down the hatch
    colloq
    Said as a toast: drink up!
Idiom: under hatches
    Below decks.
    Out of sight.
    Dead.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon hæc.





hatch2
verb hatches, hatched, hatching
    intr
    1. Said of an animal or bird: to break out of an egg.
      Form: hatch out (also)
    intr
    2. Said of an egg: to break open, allowing young animals or birds to be born.
    3. To produce (young animals or birds) from eggs.
    4. To plan or devise (a plot, scheme, etc), especially in secret.
      Thesaurus: incubate, conceive, concoct, contrive, design, develop, devise, originate, plan, plot, scheme.
      Form: hatch something up (often)
noun hatches
    1. The act or process of hatching.
    2. A brood of newly hatched animals.
Idiom: count one's chickens before they are hatched
    Note: usually with negatives
    To rely too much on some uncertain future event.
Etymology: 13c.





hatch3
verb
    hatches, hatched, hatching
    1. Said of the surface of a map, drawing, engraving, etc: to shade with close parallel or crossed lines.
Derivative: hatching
noun
    Etymology: 15c: from French hacher to chop, from hache hatchet.



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