释义 |
hoe I. \ˈhō\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English hogh, from Old English hōh; probably akin to Old English hōh heel — more at hock IV obsolete : promontory, hill, cliff — used in English place names < on the Hoe at Plymouth > II. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English howe, from Middle French houe, from Old French, of Germanic origin; akin to Middle Dutch houwe mattock, Old High German houwa; derivative from the verb represented by Old High German houwan to hew — more at hew 1. a. : an agricultural implement that usually consists of a thin flat blade set transversely on a long handle and is used especially for cultivating, weeding, or loosening the earth around plants b. : an implement that functions like a hoe and is arranged with a wheel and one or two handles for more rapid cultivation c. : a one-horse tillage implement for cultivating between rows (as of vines or bushes) < a berry hoe > < a grape hoe > d. : any of various cultivating or weeding implements usually for use with animal or mechanical draft — see rotary hoe, spring hoe, spring-trip hoe, wheel cultivator 2 2. : an implement or tool felt to resemble or serving a purpose like that of a hoe: as a. : a rake designed for stirring up a furnace fire b. : an instrument for spreading and mixing mortar, concrete, or similar substances c. : backhoe III. verb (hoed ; hoed ; hoeing ; hoes) Etymology: Middle English howwen, from howe, n. intransitive verb : to use a hoe : work with a hoe < was hoeing in the field by the road > transitive verb : to weed, cultivate, or thin (a crop) with a hoe < hoe out the strawberries > : remove (weeds) by hoeing < soon have to hoe the weeds from the corn > : dress or cultivate (land) by hoeing < hoed 7 acres with a spring hoe > IV. noun (-s) Etymology: English dialect (Shetland) ho, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse hār dogfish, shark, tholepin — more at haye chiefly Scotland : spiny dogfish |