释义 |
hay I. \ˈhā\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English haie, heie, from Old English hege; akin to Old English haga hedge, hawthorn — more at hedge 1. archaic : an enclosing fence : hedge 2. archaic : a place enclosed with a hay : park II. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English hey, from Old English hīeg, hīg, hēg; akin to Old High German hewi hay, Old Norse hey, Gothic hawi hay, Old English hēawan to hew — more at hew 1. : grass ready for mowing or especially cut and cured for fodder; specifically : the entire herbage sometimes including the seeds of grasses and other forage plants (as legumes) harvested and dried especially for feed 2. : a grayish greenish yellow that is slightly less strong and very slightly lighter than absinthe yellow, greener and duller than dusty yellow, and slightly deeper than yellow stone 3. : a rewarding result of careful effort, industriousness, or cultivation (as of friendships) < got some political hay out of his association with underworld characters > 4. slang : bed — used with the < drag out of the hay at six-thirty to dress and serve breakfast — Margaret Long > < caught him in the hay with one of her maids — H.A.Smith > 5. : a trifling sum of money < sells over $250,000 worth of them a year — and in the book trade that is anything but hay — J.C.Furnas > III. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) intransitive verb : to cut and cure grass for hay and usually haul it from the field and store it transitive verb 1. : to dry (a cut grass) so as to make hay 2. : to grow grass on for making hay < hay the lower meadow > 3. : to give hay to < hay the horses > IV. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English haye, from Anglo-French haie archaic : a net used for catching a wild animal (as a rabbit) V. noun or hey \“\ (-s) Etymology: Middle French haye 1. : a rustic dance with much interweaving of couples 2. : a right and left performed in a figure eight, straight line, or circular pattern in a dance |