hatch

  • 121hatch — The emerging of the baby chick from the incubated egg …

    Combined glossary of agriculture

  • 122hatch — See: count one s chickens before they are hatched …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 123hatch — I. , sb. == a small door. O. and N. 1056. AS. hæca II. , v. a. pret. ‘haȝte.’ O. and N. 105; part, ‘y haht.’ Pol. S. 237 …

    Oldest English Words

  • 124hatch — hætʃ n. brood of hatchlings; emergence from an egg; opening in a wall or floor, opening through which passengers or cargo may pass (especially in a ship); door covering such an opening, trapdoor v. emerge from an egg; cause to come out of an… …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 125hatch v — hatchet n …

    English expressions

  • 126hatch — I. v. a. 1. Breed (from eggs). 2. Quicken (by incubation or by heat). 3. Concoct, devise, plan, contrive, plot, design, scheme, project, brew, lay out, excogitate, think out. II. n. 1. Brood. 2. Hatchway …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 127hatch — verb 1) the duck hatched her eggs Syn: incubate, brood 2) the plot that you hatched up last night Syn: devise, conceive, concoct, brew, invent, plan, design, formulate; think up …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 128Hatch — /hætʃ/ (say hach) noun Marshall Davidson, born 1932, Australian research scientist …