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A Writer's Dictionary:

haul up Definition


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


haul
verb hauled, hauling
    tr & intr
    1. To pull with great effort or difficulty.
      Thesaurus: drag, pull, tug, lug, draw, heave, cart, tow.
    2. To transport by road, eg in a lorry.
      Thesaurus: carry, convey, move, tow, transport.
    3. naut.
      To alter the course of a vessel, especially so as to sail closer to the wind.
    intr
    4. naut.
      Said of the wind: to blow from a direction nearer the bow of a vessel.
noun
    1. The distance to be travelled.
      Example: Just a short haul now over the mountains
      Example: It's a long haul to Sydney
    2. The act of dragging something with effort or difficulty.
      Thesaurus: pull, wrench, tug, lift, drag, heave.
    3. The amount gained at any one time, eg the amount of fish caught in a single net or of something stolen.
      Thesaurus: loot, booty, catch, find, gain, harvest, spoils, takings, yield.
    4. Something that is hauled.
    5. The amount of contraband seized at any one time.
      Example: drugs haul
Derivative: hauler
noun
    Idiom: haul someone over the coals
    Derivative: long haul
      See separate entry.
    Etymology: 16c: from French haler to drag.

    Phrasal Verb: haul up
      To sail a vessel closer to the wind.
    Phrasal Verb: haul someone up
      To call them to account (before a court, judge, etc).


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