hex 1 (h ks)n.1. An evil spell; a curse. 2. One that brings bad luck. tr.v. hexed, hex·ing, hex·es 1. To put a hex on. 2. To bring or wish bad luck to: "Chilly evening weather and a chain of minor snafus seemed to hex the $5,000-a-seat gala on Governors Island" (Newsweek).
[Pennsylvania Dutch, from German hexen, to hex, from Hexe, witch, from Middle High German hecse, from Old High German hagzissa.]
hex er n. Word History: The word hex is a good example of the sort of borrowing from other languages that occurred in the English-speaking former colonies of Great Britain. German and Swiss immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania in the late 17th and 18th centuries spoke a dialect of German known as Pennsylvania Dutch. In this dialect hexe was the equivalent of the German verb hexen, "to practice sorcery." The English verb hex, first recorded in the sense "to practice witchcraft" in an 1830 work called Annals of Philadelphia, is borrowed from Pennsylvania Dutch, as is the noun. |
hex 2 (h ks)adj. Hexagonal. Used of hardware. |
hex Noun
Adjective
of or relating to hexadecimal notation: hex code
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
| Noun | 1. | hex - an evil spell; "a witch put a curse on his whole family"; "he put the whammy on me"magic spell, magical spell, charm, spell - a verbal formula believed to have magical force; "he whispered a spell as he moved his hands"; "inscribed around its base is a charm in Balinese" |
| Verb | 1. | hex - cast a spell over someone or something; put a hex on someone or somethingvoodoo - bewitch by or as if by a voodoo spell - place under a spell becharm, charm - control by magic spells, as by practicing witchcraft |
| Adj. | 1. | hex - of or pertaining to a number system having 16 as its base |
Translations
hex [hɛks] (
US)
n →
sort m hex [hɛks] (
US)
n →
Fluch m