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hull
1[huhl]
hull
2[huhl]
noun
the hollow, lowermost portion of a ship, floating partially submerged and supporting the remainder of the ship.
Aeronautics.
the boatlike fuselage of a flying boat on which the plane lands or takes off.
the cigar-shaped arrangement of girders enclosing the gasbag of a rigid dirigible.
verb (used with object)
to pierce (the hull of a ship), especially below the water line.
verb (used without object)
to drift without power or sails.
Hull
3[huhl]
noun
Bobby Robert Marvin Hull, 1939–2023, Canadian ice-hockey player, known as “the Golden Jet”: Hockey Hall of Fame 1983.
Cordell 1871–1955, U.S. secretary of state 1933–44, known as “the Father of the United Nations”: Nobel Peace Prize 1945.
William, 1753–1825, U.S. general, court-martialed and sentenced to death after surrendering a U.S. fort to the British during the War of 1812: pardoned by President Madison.
Official Name Kingston-upon-Hull. a seaport in Humberside, in eastern England, on the Humber River.
a city in southeastern Canada, on the Ottawa River opposite Ottawa.
Hull
1/ hʌl /
noun
a city and port in NE England, in Kingston upon Hull unitary authority, East Riding of Yorkshire: fishing, food processing; two universities. Pop: 301 416 (2001). Official name: Kingston upon Hull
a city in SE Canada, in SW Quebec on the River Ottawa: a centre of the timber trade and associated industries. Pop: 66 246 (2001)
Hull
2/ hʌl /
noun
Cordell. 1871–1955, US statesman; secretary of state (1933–44). He helped to found the U.N.: Nobel peace prize 1945
hull
3/ hʌl /
noun
the main body of a vessel, tank, flying boat, etc
the shell or pod of peas or beans; the outer covering of any fruit or seed; husk
the persistent calyx at the base of a strawberry, raspberry, or similar fruit
the outer casing of a missile, rocket, etc
verb
to remove the hulls from (fruit or seeds)
(tr) to pierce the hull of (a vessel, tank, etc)
hull
The dry outer covering of a fruit, seed, or nut; a husk.
The enlarged calyx of a fruit, such as a strawberry, that is usually green and easily detached.
Other Word Forms
- huller noun
- hull-less adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of hull1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hull1
Idioms and Phrases
hull down, (of a ship) sufficiently far away, or below the horizon, that the hull is invisible.
hull up, (of a ship) sufficiently near, or above the horizon, that the hull is visible.
Example Sentences
She became a music teacher at Wansbeck Primary School in Kingston upon Hull, which has a progressive programme for the inclusion of children with learning difficulties.
The duchess was a great music lover - supporting music charities and teaching music in a Hull primary school, where pupils knew nothing of her royal identity, and where she was known as "Mrs Kent".
Elizabeth Wilson, 18, from Hull, is due to start a maths degree course at Newcastle University and believes ScotRail's initiative should be "standard across the whole of the country".
I moved to Hull at 17, which was a big lifestyle difference.
At the time of the mass sackings, hundreds of people protested in Dover, Liverpool, and Hull.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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