Hell & High Water (Thirds #1) by Charlie Cochet Read Fre
hell
(hĕl)n.
1. Christianity
a. often Hell The place of eternal punishment for the wicked after death, oftentimes imagined every bit existence presided over past Satan and his devils.
b. A land of separation from God; exclusion from God'south presence.
2. The dwelling house of the expressionless in any of diverse religious traditions, such as the Hebrew Sheol or the Greek Hades; the underworld.
3.
a. A situation or place of evil, misery, discord, or destruction: "War is hell" (William Tecumseh Sherman).
b. An extremely difficult experience; torment or ache: went through hell on the chore.
4.
a. The spirits in hell or the powers of evil: All hell could not stop him.
b. Informal Ane that causes trouble, agony, or annoyance: The boss is hell when a job is poorly done.
five. A abrupt scolding: gave the student hell for cheating.
half dozen.
a. A tailor'south receptacle for discarded fabric.
b. Printing A hellbox.
7. Breezy
a. An outstanding or noteworthy example: You lot are one hell of a expert cook.
b. Used every bit an intensive: How the hell should I know?
c. Used for intensive effect in idioms such as beat the hell out of (someone) for shell (someone) very badly.
8. Primitive A gambling business firm.
intr.v. helled, hell·ing, hells Informal
To acquit riotously; carouse: out all dark helling around.
interj.
Used to express anger, cloy, or impatience.
for the hell of it
For no particular reason; on a whim: walked habitation by the quondam schoolhouse for the hell of information technology.
hell on Breezy
1. Damaging or destructive to: Driving in a hilly town is hell on the brakes.
2. Unpleasant to or painful for.
hell or /and high water
Troubles or difficulties of any magnitude: We're staying, come up hell or high water.
hell to pay
Great trouble: If we're wrong, in that location'll be hell to pay.
like hell Breezy
i. Used as an intensive: He ran like hell to catch the double-decker.
2. Used to express strong contradiction or refusal: He says he'southward going along with us—Like hell he is!
to hell and gone
1. A long distance abroad: drove to hell and gone and still couldn't find a diner.
2. Far and broad: friends scattered to hell and gone.
iii. Into the side by side world: The bomb blew the truck to hell and gone.
to hell with
Used to express contempt for or dismissal of someone or something.
Word History: When the Anglo-Saxons became Christian in early medieval times, the Old English language word hel was used to interpret the Latin give-and-take īnfernus, "the lower region, hell," and designate the fiery place of eternal punishment for the damned. Merely what did hel designate before the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons? We tin observe some indication of the original pagan meaning of hel by examining its Onetime Norse equivalent, hel. The medieval Scandinavians and Icelanders were converted from paganism much later than the Anglo-Saxons, and they preserved a adept deal of pagan verse revealing the aboriginal Scandinavian vision of the afterworld. The medieval Icelandic scholar Snorri Sturluson, a Christian, too paints a bright picture of hel for us in his accounts of Norse myth (although his clarification may have been influenced by his own Christian conception of hell). The Old Norse hel is the abode of oathbreakers, other evil persons, and those unlucky enough to have died of old historic period or sickness rather than in the glory of the battlefield. Different the typical Christian conception of Hell, the Old Norse hel is very cold. It contrasts sharply with Valhalla, the hall in Asgard where heroes slain in battle quaff with the gods after death. In Old Norse, Hel is also the proper noun of the goddess or giantess who presides in hel. She is the daughter of the god Loki and sister of the enormous wolf that volition attack the gods at the end of the world. One half of Hel's torso is blue-black, while the other is white. The Indo-European root behind Old English hel and Old Norse hel, equally well as their Germanic relatives like German language Hölle, "hell," is *kel-, "to embrace, muffle." In origin, hell is thus the "concealed identify." The root *kel-, also gives us other words for things that cover, conceal, or incorporate, such as hall, hole, hollow, helmet, and even Valhalla, from Old Norse Valhöll, literally the "Hall (höll) of the Slain (Valr)."
American Heritage® Lexicon of the English Linguistic communication, 5th Edition. Copyright © 2022 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
hell
(hɛl)due north
1. (Theology) Christianity (sometimes upper-case letter)
a. the place or land of eternal punishment of the wicked later on death, with Satan equally its ruler
b. forces of evil regarded as residing there
ii. (Other Non-Christian Religions) (sometimes capital) (in diverse religions and cultures) the domicile of the spirits of the dead. See also Hel, Hades, Sheol
3. pain, extreme difficulty, etc
4. informal a cause of such difficulty or suffering: state of war is hell.
v. US and Canadian high spirits or mischievousness: at that place's hell in that boy.
6. (Knitting & Sewing) a box used by a tailor for discarded fabric
7. (Gambling, except Cards) rare a gambling house, berth, etc
viii. equally hell (intensifier): tired every bit hell.
ix. for the hell of information technology informal for the fun of it
10. from hell informal cogent a person or thing that is particularly bad or alarming: neighbour from hell; hangover from hell.
11. give someone hell informal
a. to give someone a severe reprimand or penalty
b. to exist a source of badgerer or torment to someone
12. hell of a helluva informal (intensifier): a hell of a practiced performance.
13. hell for leather at keen speed
fourteen. hell or loftier water come hell or high water breezy whatsoever difficulties may ascend
15. hell to pay breezy serious consequences, as of a foolish action
sixteen. like hell informal
a. (adverb) (intensifier): he works like hell.
b. an expression of strong disagreement with a previous statement, request, social club, etc
17. play hell with play merry hell with breezy to throw into defoliation and disorder; disrupt
xviii. raise hell
a. to create a noisy disturbance, as in fun
b. to react strongly and unfavourably
19. the hell breezy
a. (intensifier) used in such phrases equally what the hell, who the hell, etc
b. an expression of strong disagreement or disfavour
interj
informal an exclamation of anger, annoyance, surprise, etc (Likewise in exclamations such equally hell's bells, hell's teeth, etc)
[Former English hell; related to helan to cover, Quondam Norse hel, Gothic halja hell, Old High German hella]
Collins English Lexicon – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2022 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
hell
(hɛl)n.
ane. the place or state of punishment of the wicked after decease; the home of evil and condemned spirits.
2. any identify or country of torment or misery: to make someone's life hell.
3. something that causes torment or misery.
4. the powers of evil.
v. the dwelling house of the dead; Sheol or Hades.
half-dozen. extreme disorder or confusion; anarchy: All hell broke loose.
7. a severe scolding or punishment: to catch hell; to give someone hell.
8. (used in swearing, as an expression of anger, dismissal, disgust, etc., or as an intensive): the hell with information technology; guilty as hell; a hell of a nice guy; Where the hell were you?
ix. a box into which a printer throws discarded type.
interj.10. (used to express irritation, disgust, surprise, etc.)
5.11. hell around, Slang. to live or act in a wild or dissolute style.
Idioms:1. be hell on, Slang.
a. to be unpleasant to or painful for.
b. to exist harmful to: These country roads are hell on tires.
2. for the hell of information technology, Breezy. with no purpose other than sheer adventure or fun.
three. hell on wheels, Breezy. extremely aggressive, agile, or hard to deal with.
four. hell to pay, very bad results or repercussions.
5. like hell, Informal.
a. with groovy speed, attempt, intensity, etc.: We ran like hell.
b. Also, the hell. (used to emphasize a speaker's denial or disagreement): He says the motor won't break down? Similar hell it won't!
vi. play hell with, Informal. to injure or disrupt.
seven. raise hell, Informal.
a. to indulge in wild celebration.
b. to create an uproar; object violently.
eight. till hell freezes over, an impossibly long fourth dimension; forever.
[earlier 900; Eye English, Sometime English hel(l), c. Old Loftier German hell(i)a, Old Norse hel, Gothic halja; alike to Old English language helan to encompass, hibernate, and to hulltwo]
he'll
(hil; unstressed il, hɪl, ɪl)wrinkle of he will.
Random Business firm Kernerman Webster's College Lexicon, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
hell
- barathrum - A bottomless pit or hell.
- fire and brimstone - Eternal punishment in hell (from Genesis 19:24 and Revelation 19:xx).
- pandemonium - Literally means dwelling house of all demons (or hell), from Greek pan-, "all," and daimon, "demon(southward)."
- hell - The Indo-European root meant "covered or concealed," every bit hell is supposedly hidden in the dark regions almost the Earth's centre.
Farlex Trivia Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.
Hell
an abnormal fearfulness of heil. Too called stygiophobia.
hadephobia.
-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Thesaurus Antonyms Related Words Synonyms Legend:
Noun | 1. | ![]() hell on earth, hellhole, inferno, snake pit, the pits region, function - the extended spatial location of something; "the farming regions of France"; "religions in all parts of the world"; "regions of outer space" |
ii. | hell - a crusade of difficulty and suffering; "state of war is hell"; "go to blazes" bonfire problem - an outcome causing distress or pain; "what is the trouble?"; "heart problem" | |
iii. | ![]() infernal region, under region, perdition, Inferno, pit fictitious identify, imaginary place, mythical place - a place that exists just in imagination; a identify said to exist in fictional or religious writings Gehenna, Tartarus - a place where the wicked are punished afterward death hellfire, red region - a identify of eternal fire envisaged equally penalty for the damned Christian religion, Christianity - a monotheistic system of beliefs and practices based on the Old Testament and the teachings of Jesus as embodied in the New Testament and emphasizing the office of Jesus as savior Heaven - the habitation of God and the angels | |
4. | ![]() netherworld, Scheol, underworld, Hades, infernal region fictitious place, imaginary place, mythical place - a place that exists only in imagination; a place said to exist in fictional or religious writings faith, religion, religious belief - a potent conventionalities in a supernatural power or powers that control human destiny; "he lost his faith but not his morality" Acheron, River Acheron - (Greek mythology) a river in Hades across which the souls of the dead were carried past Charon Cocytus, River Cocytus - (Greek mythology) a river in Hades that was said to be a tributary of the Acheron Lethe, River Lethe - (Greek mythology) a river in Hades; the souls of the expressionless had to drinkable from it, which made them forget all they had washed and suffered when they were alive River Styx, Styx - (Greek mythology) a river in Hades across which Charon carried expressionless souls | |
v. | hell - violent and excited action; "they began to fight similar sin" sin action - any specific beliefs; "they avoided all recreational activity" colloquialism - a vernacular expression; characteristic of spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal oral communication | |
6. | hell - noisy and unrestrained mischief; "raising blazes" blaze mischief, mischief-making, devilment, roguery, shenanigan, roguishness, devilry, deviltry, mischievousness, rascality - reckless or malicious behavior that causes discomfort or annoyance in others |
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart drove. © 2003-2012 Princeton Academy, Farlex Inc.
hell
noun
1. the underworld, the abyss, Hades (Greek myth), hellfire, the inferno, fire and brimstone, the abysmal pit, Gehenna (New Testament, Judaism), the nether world, the lower world, Tartarus (Greek myth), the infernal regions, the bad fire (breezy), Acheron (Greek myth), Abaddon, the abode of the damned Don't worry about going to Hell, just be good.
2. (Informal) torment, suffering, agony, trial, nightmare, misery, ordeal, anguish, illness, martyrdom, wretchedness the hell of grief and lost honey
hell for leather headlong, quickly, quickly, swiftly, hurriedly, at the double, full-tilt, pell-mell, hotfoot, at a rate of knots, like a bat out of hell (slang), posthaste The first horse frequently goes hell for leather.
enhance hell cause a disturbance, run riot, go wild, raise Cain, be loud and noisy Those people will be jabbering and raising hell.
Quotations
"There is a dreadful Hell,"
"And everlasting pains;"
"There sinners must with devils dwell"
"In darkness, fire, and bondage" [Isaac Watts Divine Songs for Children]
"Hell hath no limits nor is circumscribed"
"In 1 self place, where nosotros are is Hell,"
"And to be curt, when all the world dissolves"
"And every creature shall be purified"
"All places shall exist Hell that are not Heaven" [Christopher Marlowe Doctor Faustus]
"But wherefore chiliad alone? Wherefore with thee"
"Came not all hell bankrupt loose?" [John Milton Paradise Lost]
"Hell is other people" [Jean-Paul Sartre Huis Clos]
"A perpetual holiday is a adept working definition of hell" [George Bernard Shaw Parents and Children]
"Hell is a city much like London -"
"A populous and smoky city" [Percy Bysshe Shelley Peter Bell the 3rd]
"Hell is not to love any more than, madame. Not to love any more!" [Georges Bernanos The Diary of a Country Priest]
"What is hell?"
"Hell is yourself,"
"Hell is alone, the other figures in information technology"
"Merely projections" [T.Southward. Eliot The Cocktail Political party]
"If there is no Hell, a adept many preachers are obtaining coin under false pretenses" [William A. Dominicus]
Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged second Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002
hell
nounExcruciating punishment:
Idiom: tortures of the damned.
Informal. To comport riotously.Also used with around:
Idioms: blow off steam, cut loose, kick over the traces, boot up i'south heels, allow go, allow loose, brand merry, make whoopee, paint the town red, raise Cain, whoop it up.
The American Heritage® Roget'south Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2022 past Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published past Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Translations
ад
peklo
helvede
infero
põrgu
helvetti
pakao
pokol csehenem dzsehennem
neraka
helviti helvíti
地獄
지옥
iš neturėjimo ką veikti pragaras šiaip sau užsispyręs kaip velnias
elle
peklo
pekel
helvete
นรก
địa ngục
Collins Castilian Lexicon - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
hell
[ˈhɛl]
n
(RELIGION) (= place) → enfer m
he can become to hell → il peut aller se faire voir
information technology is hell on world (= terrible) → c'est 50'enfer
a living hell → united nations véritable enfer
the neighbour from hell → le pire des voisins
come hell or high water (= come up what may) → quoi qu'il arrive
oh, to hell with information technology! (= who cares) → la barbe!
what the hell! (= I don't care) → et merde !
(used for emphasis) a hell of a ... [+ struggle, job] → un(e) sacré(e) ...
to take a hell of a job doing sth → avoir beaucoup de mal à faire qch
a hell of a lot (= huge amount) → énormément
a hell of a lot of sth → énormément de qch
at that place'll be hell to pay (= trouble) → ça va barder
(= fun) for the hell of it → pour le plaisir
I did it just for the hell of it
BUT Je l'ai fait juste parce que ça me chantait.
(with what, how, who, where) what the hell's going on? → mais bon sang, qu'est-ce qui se passe?
where the hell have y'all been? → mais où étais-tu passé, bon sang?
how the hell should I know? → comment est-ce que j'aurais pu le savoir, bon sang?
to play hell with sth (= mess up) → bouleverser qch
Collins English/French Electronic Resources. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
hell
n
(inf, intensifier) a hell of a noise → ein Höllen- or Heidenlärm m (inf); it'due south (as) hot every bit hell → es ist höllisch heiß (inf); I was aroused as hell → ich state of war stinksauer (inf); to work like hell → arbeiten, was das Zeug hält, wie wild arbeiten (inf); to run similar hell → laufen, was die Beine hergeben; information technology hurts like hell → es tut wahnsinnig weh (inf); we had a or one hell of a fourth dimension (= bad, difficult) → es state of war grauenhaft; (= good) → wir haben uns prima amüsiert (inf); a hell of a lot → verdammt viel (inf); she'due south a or 1 hell of a girl → die ist schwer in Ordnung (inf), → das ist ein klasse Mädchen (inf); that's 1 or a hell of a problem/difference/climb → das ist ein verdammt or wahnsinnig schwieriges Trouble (inf) → /ein wahnsinniger Unterschied (inf) → /eine wahnsinnige Kletterei (inf); I promise to hell he'southward correct → ich hoffe ja nur, dass er recht hat; to hell with you/him → hol dich/ihn der Teufel (inf), → du kannst/der kann mich mal (inf); to hell with it! → verdammt noch mal (inf); to hell with your problems! → deine Probleme können mir gestohlen bleiben (inf); get the hell out of my house! → mach, dass du aus meinem Haus kommst!; go to hell! → scher dich or geh zum Teufel! (inf); he can go to hell for all I care → meinetwegen soll er sich zum Teufel scheren (inf); what the hell do you lot desire? → was willst du denn, verdammt noch mal? (inf); where the hell is information technology? → wo ist es denn, verdammt noch mal? (inf); you lot scared the hell out of me → du hast mich zu Tode erschreckt; like hell he will! → den Teufel wird er tun (inf); pay that much for a repast? similar hell → and so viel für ein Essen bezahlen? ich bin doch nicht verrückt!; he knows the Queen? — like hell! → er und dice Königin kennen? — wers glaubt!; hell! → then'due north Mist! (inf), → verdammt noch mal! (inf); hell's bells!, hell's teeth! (euph, expressing surprise) → heiliger Strohsack or Bimbam! (inf); (expressing anger) → zum Kuckuck noch mal! (inf); what the hell, I've zero to lose → zum Teufel, ich habe nichts zu verlieren (inf)
hell
:
hellbender
n (United states)
(Zool) → Schlammteufel 1000, → Riesensalamander m
hellcat
due north → Giftziege f (inf)
hell
:
hellhound
n → Höllenhund m; (fig) → Teufel 1000
Collins German language Dictionary – Complete and Entire 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
Collins Italian Lexicon 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995
hell
(hel) substantive(according to some religions) the identify or state of punishment of the wicked after death with much pain, misery etc. hel جهنَّم ад inferno peklo die Hölle helvede κόλαση infierno põrgu جهنم helvetti enfer גיהינום नरक pakao pokol neraka helvíti inferno 地獄 지옥 같은 곳 pragaras elle Neraka hel, vagevuur helvete piekło د وزخ inferno iad ад peklo pekel pakao helvete[t] ขุมนรก cehennem 地獄 пекло جہنم địa ngục 地狱
for the hell of itfor no detail reason; just for fun. The boys said they had set fire to the business firm just for the hell of it. vir die aardigheid بِدون أي سبب مُحَدَّد، للمرح فقط ей така por farra z legrace aus Spaß for sjov για πλάκα, στα καλά καθούμενα por que sí; por el gusto de hacerlo, por darse el gusto lõbu pärast بي دليل huvin vuoksi pour le plaisir סתם अकारण iz vica, za zabavu csak úgy heccből tanpa alasan til gamans così, per gioco おもしろ半分に 이유도 없이 šiaip sau, iš neturėjimo ką veikti joka pēc; tāpat vien utk suka-suka zomaar, voor de grap bare på gøy dla zabawy بی دلیل por gozo (doar aşa) de-al naibii просто так zo žartu za hec radi zabave för skojs skull, på jävelskap ทำอย่างสนุก sırf zevk/iş olsun diye 沒有特別原因,只是為了好玩 просто так یوں ہی، تفریحا chỉ đùa cho vui 只是为了好玩
ˌhellˈbent onadamant on. I've told him it will be dangerous, but he'due south hellbent on going. vasbeslote wees مُصَمِّمٌ عَلى настървен decidido pevně rozhodnutý rücksichtslos fast besluttet αποφασισμένος totalmente resuelto a pähe võtnud مصمم vakaasti päättänyt acharné נחוש कृतसंकल्प koji bezglavo srlja elszánt bertekad harðákveðinn í east-u ostinato どうしてもやる 굳게 결심하다 užsispyręs kaip velnias pārņemts (ar kaut ko); apsēsts berkeras vastbesloten fast besluttet på zdeterminowany پرېكړه كول، فيصله كول، محدودول، څرګندول، معلومول، پرټاكلى لاره روانول decidido (al naibii de) hotărât дьявольски упорствовать pevne rozhodnutý, odhodlaný trdno odločen rešen absolut inställd på, fast besluten ซึ่งตั้งใจจริงอย่างไม่ยอมลดละ azimli, kararlı 堅決的 такий, що має намір що зробити تلا ہوا، بختہ عزم cứ khăng khăng 固执的
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 Thou Dictionaries Ltd.
hell
→ جَحِيم peklo helvede Hölle κόλαση infierno helvetti enfer pakao inferno 地獄 지옥 hel helvete piekło inferno ад helvete นรก cehennem địa ngục 地域Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
Source: https://www.thefreedictionary.com/hell
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