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Hang   /hæŋ/   Listen
Hang

verb
(past & past part. hung; pres. part. hanging)
1.
Be suspended or hanging.
2.
Cause to be hanging or suspended.  Synonym: hang up.
3.
Kill by hanging.  Synonym: string up.
4.
Let drop or droop.
5.
Fall or flow in a certain way.  Synonyms: fall, flow.  "Her long black hair flowed down her back"
6.
Be menacing, burdensome, or oppressive.  "The cloud of suspicion hangs over her"
7.
Give heed (to).  Synonyms: advert, attend, give ear, pay heed.  "She hung on his every word" , "They attended to everything he said"
8.
Be suspended or poised.
9.
Hold on tightly or tenaciously.  Synonym: cling.  "The child clung to his mother's apron"
10.
Be exhibited.
11.
Prevent from reaching a verdict, of a jury.
12.
Decorate or furnish with something suspended.
13.
Be placed in position as by a hinge.
14.
Place in position as by a hinge so as to allow free movement in one direction.
15.
Suspend (meat) in order to get a gamey taste.
noun
1.
A special way of doing something.  Synonyms: bent, knack.  "He had a special knack for getting into trouble" , "He couldn't get the hang of it"
2.
The way a garment hangs.
3.
A gymnastic exercise performed on the rings or horizontal bar or parallel bars when the gymnast's weight is supported by the arms.



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"Hang" Quotes from Famous Books



... the young man, "I've got a father; I kept him alive during the War, so he's bound to keep me alive now. Though, of course, there's the question whether he ought to be allowed to hang on to his property. What do ...
— Forsyte Saga • John Galsworthy

... the church lay open to all comers, without locks and bars, and none to look after them, those specially that lead up to the leads above; two young children not above five years old, had got up the steeple by themselves, and having lost their way down, come to the place where the great bells hang. Here there was a large round space left purposely in the arch, when first built, for the drawing up bells or any other things, as there should be occasion. This place used to be safely closed before, but now it lay wide open, and was between ...
— The New Guide to Peterborough Cathedral • George S. Phillips

... wanderer; the houses were shut up, and their inmates, for the most part, already retired to rest, and the suburbs did not rejoice, as the city, in the round of the watchman with his drowsy call to the inhabitants, "Hang out your lights!" The passengers, who at first, in various small groups and parties, had enlivened the stranger's way, seemed to him, unconscious as he was of the lapse of time, to have suddenly vanished ...
— The Last Of The Barons, Complete • Edward Bulwer-Lytton

... Chicot, on arriving at the top of a hill, reined in his horse suddenly. But the ass, having once taken it into his head to gallop, was not so easily stopped, and Gorenflot was forced to let himself slide off and hang on to the donkey with all his weight before he ...
— Chicot the Jester - [An abridged translation of "La dame de Monsoreau"] • Alexandre Dumas

... Do you think I have devoted to you my life, my blood, shown myself ready to kill, to assassinate your enemy, in order that I may receive that exorbitant interest called gratitude? Have I become an usurer of this kind? There are some men who would hang the weight of a benefit around your heart like a cannon-ball attached to the feet of——, but let that pass! Such men I would crush as I would a worm, without thinking that I had committed homicide! No! I have asked you to adopt me as your father, that my heart may be to you ...
— Vautrin • Honore de Balzac


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