Holed – definition
Usage examples:
A fuel tank was holed by the attack and a fire started
Hit (the ball) into a hole.
Usage examples:
George holed a six-iron shot from the fairway
A hollow place in a solid body or surface.
Usage examples:
The dog had dug a hole in the ground
A place or position that needs to be filled because someone or something is no longer there.
Usage examples:
She is missed terribly and her death has left a hole in all our lives
Usage examples:
She had wasted a whole lifetime in this hole of a town
Past simple and past participle of
hole
Usage examples:
A torpedo holed the ship below the water and it quickly sank.
Holed translation into English
Holed: translate from English into Chinese
Holed: translate from English into Dutch
Holed: translate from English into French
Holed: translate from English into German
Holed: translate from English into Hindi
Holed: translate from English into Italian
Holed: translate from English into Korean
Holed: translate from English into Russian
Holed: translate from English into Spanish
Word origin
Old English hol (noun), holian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch hol (noun) ‘cave’, (adjective) ‘hollow’, and German hohl ‘hollow’, from an Indo-European root meaning ‘cover, conce
Holed – similar words
A hollow place in a solid body or surface.
Usage examples:
The dog had dug a hole in the ground
Usage examples:
A fuel tank was holed by the attack and a fire started
Holed synonims
A long, deep cut or wound.
Usage examples:
A bad gash in one leg became infected
Make a long, deep cut in.
Usage examples:
The jagged edges gashed their fingers
Usage examples:
The gash bucket
Blood that has been shed, especially as a result of violence.
Usage examples:
The film omitted the blood and gore in order to avoid controversy
(of an animal such as a bull) pierce or stab (a person or other animal) with a horn or tusk.
Usage examples:
He was gored to death by a charging bull
Shape with a gore or gores.
Usage examples:
For a larger figure it would be necessary to slightly gore the skirt
Tear or make deep cuts in (flesh or skin).
Usage examples:
The point had lacerated his neck
To cut or tear something, esp. flesh
Usage examples:
His face and hands were lacerated by the flying glass., [ c ] justina was treated for a scalp lacer…
Go into or through (something), especially with force or effort.
Usage examples:
The shrapnel had penetrated his head
Pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance
To move into or through something
Usage examples:
[ i ] the drill isn’t sharp enough to penetrate into the rock., [ t ] women have begun to penetrate…
Pierce and make a hole or holes in.
Usage examples:
There is a very small risk of the scope perforating the colon
Usage examples:
A perforate shell
(of a sharp pointed object) go into or through (something).
Usage examples:
A splinter had pierced the skin
To go in or through something, esp. with a pointed object, making a hole
Usage examples:
Pierce the potatoes with a fork to see if they’re done., she got her ears pierced.
A small hole in a tyre resulting in an escape of air.
Usage examples:
She was on her way home when she had a puncture
Make a puncture in (something).
Usage examples:
One of the knife blows had punctured a lung
A small hole made by a sharp object
A tenant's regular payment to a landlord for the use of property or land.
Usage examples:
I cannot even afford to pay the rent on this flat
Pay someone for the use of (something, typically property, land, or a car).
Usage examples:
They rented a house together in sussex
A large tear in a piece of fabric.
Usage examples:
Eddie was dismayed by the rent in the roof of the tent
(especially of a pipe or container, or bodily part such as an organ or membrane) break or burst suddenly.
Usage examples:
If the main artery ruptures he could die
An instance of breaking or bursting suddenly and completely.
Usage examples:
A small hairline crack could develop into a rupture
To burst or break, or to cause something to burst or break
Usage examples:
[ i ] high winds caused the oil tank to rupture., there is a rupture in confidence in government.
A long, narrow cut or opening.
Usage examples:
Make a slit in the stem under a bud
Make a long, narrow cut in.
Usage examples:
Give me the truth or i will slit your throat
A thin, pointed piece of metal, wood, or another rigid material.
Usage examples:
The spikes dug into the thin material of the bags, and dirt began to leak out.
Impale on or pierce with a sharp point.
Usage examples:
She spiked another oyster
A flower cluster formed of many flower heads attached directly to a long stem.
Usage examples:
This handsome plant has striking blue flowers in a spike on the stem
Break or cause to break forcibly into parts, especially into halves or along the grain.
Usage examples:
The ice cracked and split
A tear, crack, or fissure in something, especially down the middle or along the grain.
Usage examples:
Splits appeared in the decaying planks
A seaport on the coast of southern croatia; population 177,500 (est. 2009). founded as a roman colony in 78 bc, it contains the ruins of the palace of the emperor diocletian, built in about ad 300.
Thrust a knife or other pointed weapon into (someone) so as to wound or kill.
Usage examples:
He stabbed her in the stomach
A thrust with a knife or other pointed weapon.
Usage examples:
Multiple stab wounds
To injure someone using a sharp, pointed object
Usage examples:
He was stabbed with a fork., he’s recovering from stab wounds., cheri felt a sudden stab of guilt.,…