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.
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 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.
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
Browse alphabetically
hole
Source
Definition of hole from the Collins English Dictionary
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