Definition of 'hole'
Word forms: holes
1. countable noun
A hole is a hollow space in something solid, with an opening on one side.
2. countable noun
A hole is an opening in something that goes right through it.
3. countable noun
A hole is the home or hiding place of a mouse, rabbit, or other small animal.
4. countable noun
A hole in a law, theory, or argument is a fault or weakness that it has.
5. countable noun
6.
See in a hole
7.
See in the hole
8.
See a hole in one
9.
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Video: pronunciation of
hole
Word Frequency
hole in American English
noun
3.
7. Physics and Electronics
a vacancy in a semiconductor, crystal, etc. left by the loss or absence of an electron: in some semiconductors it acts as a carrier of a positive electric
charge
verb transitiveWord forms: holed or ˈholing
8.
to make a hole or holes in
9.
to put, hit, or drive into a hole
10.
to create by making a hole
to hole a tunnel through a mountain
Idioms:
SYNONYMY NOTE: hole is the general word for an open space in a thing and may suggest a depression in
a surface or an opening from surface to surface [a hole in the ground, a hole in a sock]; hollow basically suggests an empty space within a solid body, whether or not it extends
to the surface, but it may also be applied to a depressed place in a surface [a wooded hollow]; cavity, the Latin-derived equivalent of , hollow, has special application in formal and scientific usage [the thoracic cavity]; an excavation is a hollow made in or through ground by digging [the excavations at Pompeii]Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
Word origin
ME < OE hol, orig. neut. of adj. holh, hollow, akin to Ger hohl < IE base *kaul-, *kul-, hollow, hollow stalk > L caulis, Gr kaulos, stalk
Word Frequency
hole in American English
(verb holed, holing)
noun
2.
a hollow place in a solid body or mass; a cavity
a hole in the ground
3.
the excavated habitation of an animal; burrow
5.
a place of solitary confinement; dungeon
6.
an embarrassing position or predicament
to find oneself in a hole
7.
a cove or small harbor
8.
a fault or flaw
They found serious holes in his reasoning
10. Sport
a.
a small cavity, into which a marble, ball, or the like is to be played
b.
a score made by so playing
11. Golf
a.
the circular opening in a green into which the ball is to be played
b.
a part of a golf course from a tee to the hole corresponding to it, including fairway, rough, and hazards
c.
the number of strokes taken to hit the ball from a tee into the hole corresponding to it
12. informal
opening; slot
The radio program was scheduled for the p.m. hole
We need an experienced person to fill a hole in our accounting department
14. Electronics
a mobile vacancy in the electronic structure of a semiconductor that acts as a positive charge
carrier and has equivalent mass
16. See burn a hole in one's pocket
17. See hole in the wall
18. See in a hole
19. See make a hole in
20. See pick a hole in
transitive verb
21.
to make a hole or holes in
22.
to put or drive into a hole
23. Golf
to hit the ball into (a hole)
24.
to bore (a tunnel, passage, etc.)
Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC. Modified entries © 2019
by Penguin Random House LLC and HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Derived forms
holeless adjective
holey
adjective
Word origin
[bef. 900; ME; OE hol hole, cave, orig. neut. of hol (adj.) hollow; c. G hohl hollow]Word Frequency
hole in British English
noun
1.
an area hollowed out in a solid
2.
an opening made in or through something
10. (on a golf course)
a.
the cup on each of the greens
b.
each of the divisions of a course (usually 18) represented by the distance between
the tee and a green
c.
the score made in striking the ball from the tee into the hole
11. physics
a.
b.
(as modifier)
hole current
c.
a vacancy in the nearly full continuum of quantum states of negative energy of fermions. A hole appears as the antiparticle of the fermion
12. See in holes
13. See in the hole
14. See make a hole in
verb
15.
to make a hole or holes in (something)
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word origin
Old English hol; related to Gothic hulundi, German Höhle, Old Norse hylr pool, Latin caulis hollow stem; see hollowExamples of 'hole' in a sentence
hole
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Trends of
hole
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In other languages
hole
British English: hole
/həʊl/ NOUN
A hole is an opening or hollow space in something.
The builders cut holes into the soft stone.
- American English: hole /ˈhoʊl/
- Arabic: حُفْرَة
- Brazilian Portuguese: buraco
- Chinese: 洞
- Croatian: rupa
- Czech: díra
- Danish: hul
- Dutch: gat
- European Spanish: agujero
- Finnish: reikä
- French: trou
- German: Loch
- Greek: τρύπα
- Italian: buco
- Japanese: 穴
- Korean: 구멍
- Norwegian: hull
- Polish: dziura
- European Portuguese: buraco
- Romanian: gaură
- Russian: дыра
- Spanish: agujero
- Swedish: hål
- Thai: รู
- Turkish: delik çorap, duvar vb
- Ukrainian: діра
- Vietnamese: lỗ hổng
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hole
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Definition of hole from the Collins English Dictionary
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