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Hilling

   Also found in: Medical, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Hill, Ambrose Powell 1825-1865.
American Confederate officer active in the Seven Days' Battle, the Second Battle of Bull Run, and the Battle of Antietam (all 1862). Units under his command began the Battle of Gettysburg (1863).

Hill, James J(erome) 1838-1916.
American railroad magnate who promoted the Great Northern Railway and with J.P. Morgan gained control of the Northern Pacific Railroad in a stock market struggle that provoked the Panic of 1901.

hill  (hl)
n.
1. A well-defined natural elevation smaller than a mountain.
2. A small heap, pile, or mound.
3.
a. A mound of earth piled around and over a plant.
b. A plant thus covered.
4. An incline, especially of a road; a slope.
5. Hill
a. Capitol Hill. Often used with the.
b. The U.S. Congress. Often used with the.
tr.v. hilled, hill·ing, hills
1. To form into a hill, pile, or heap.
2. To cover (a plant) with a mound of soil.
Idiom:
over the hill Informal
Past one's prime.

[Middle English hil, from Old English hyll; see kel-2 in Indo-European roots.]

hiller n.


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Byline: Tony Henderson AHIGH Street's businesses are having a ball - thanks to salon owner Michelle Hilling.
The designer from Felling, Gateshead, who has her own London-based label Pauline Burrows, has pledged to help cousin Michelle Hilling, 38, from Ponteland.
I have found that, not hilling them, but using them as a ''cut-and-come-again'' supply of readily available mulch material, keeps them manageable in a vegetable garden.
 
 
 
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