haul
(hôl)v. hauled, haul·ing, hauls
v.tr.1. To pull or drag forcibly:
hauled the boat onto the beach. See Synonyms at
pull.
2. To transport, as with a truck or cart: hauling cars across the country.
3. a. To cause (oneself) to move, especially slowly or laboriously: hauled myself down to the lobby.
b. To compel to go, especially for trial: hauled their competitor into court.
4. Nautical To change the course of (a ship), especially in order to sail closer into the wind.
v.intr.1. To pull or drag something forcibly.
2. To provide transportation; cart.
3. To shift direction: The wind hauled to the east.
4. Nautical To change the course of a ship.
n.1. The act of pulling or dragging.
2. The act of transporting or carting.
3. A distance, especially the distance over which something is pulled or transported.
4. a. Something that is pulled or transported; a load.
b. Everything collected or acquired at a single time; the take: a big haul of fish.
Phrasal Verbs: haul off Informal 1. To draw back slightly, as in preparation for initiating an action: "hauled off and smacked the hapless aide across the face" (Bill Barol).
2. To withdraw or move to another place.
haul out To move from water onto the shore: a beach where seals often haul out; canoeists who hauled out on the riverbank to rest.
haul up To come to a halt.
Idiom: haul ass Vulgar Slang To move quickly: We'll be late if you don't haul ass.
haul′er n.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
haul
(hɔːl) vb1. to drag or draw (something) with effort
2. (tr) to transport, as in a lorry
3. (Nautical Terms) nautical to alter the course of (a vessel), esp so as to sail closer to the wind
4. (Nautical Terms) (tr) nautical to draw or hoist (a vessel) out of the water onto land or a dock for repair, storage, etc
5. (Nautical Terms) (
intr)
nautical (of the wind) to blow from a direction nearer the bow. Compare
veer13b 6. (intr) to change one's opinion or action
n7. the act of dragging with effort
8. (esp of fish) the amount caught at a single time
9. something that is hauled
10. the goods obtained from a robbery
11. a distance of hauling: a three-mile haul.
12. the amount of a contraband seizure: arms haul; drugs haul.
13. in the long haul over the long haul a. in a future time
b. over a lengthy period of time
14. a quantity of goods, awards, currency, etc earned, purchased, or otherwise received: Her haul included a Gucci dress; an impressive haul of seven medals.
[C16: from Old French haler, of Germanic origin; see hale2]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
haul
(hɔl)
v.t. 1. to pull or draw with force; drag.
2. to cart or transport; carry: to haul freight.
3. to arrest or bring before a magistrate or other authority: to haul someone into court.
v.i. 4. to pull or tug.
5. to go or come to a place, esp. with effort: to haul into town after a long drive.
6. to do carting or transport, or move freight commercially.
7. a. to sail, as in a particular direction.
b. (of the wind) to shift to a direction closer to the heading of a vessel (opposed to
veer).
c. (of the wind) to change direction, shift, or veer (often fol. by round or to).
8. haul off, a. to withdraw; leave.
b. Informal. to draw back the arm in order to strike; prepare to deal a blow.
9. haul up, a. to bring before a superior for judgment or reprimand.
b. to come to a halt; stop.
c. (of a sailing vessel) to come closer to the wind.
d. (of a vessel) to come to a halt.
n. 10. an act or instance of hauling; strong pull or tug.
11. something that is hauled.
12. the load hauled at one time; quantity carried or transported.
13. the distance or route over which anything is hauled.
14. the quantity of fish taken at one draft of the net.
15. the act of taking or acquiring something.
16. something that is taken or acquired.
[1550–60; earlier
hall, variant of
hale2]
haul′er, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.