英:[hɔ:l æs]
美:[hɔl æs]
英:[hɔ:l æs]
美:[hɔl æs]
(北美,非正式)开溜
verb
transitive verb
to cause (something) to move by pulling or drawing : to exert traction on
haul a wagon
to obtain or move by or as if by hauling
was hauled to parties night after night by his wife
to transport in a vehicle : cart trucks hauling freight
The cattle were hauled to market.
to change the course of (a ship) especially so as to sail closer to the wind
to bring before an authority for interrogation or judgment : hale
haul traffic violators into court
intransitive verb
to exert traction : pull
haul back on the reins
to move along : proceed the bull hauled back for another lunge—F. B. Gipson
about three o'clock we hauled into Moonridge—Kenneth Clark
to furnish transportation
a nominal charge for hauling
of the wind shift
noun
the act or process of hauling (see haul entry 1) : pull
The rope stood up under the strain of the haul.
a device for pulling or carting something : a device for hauling
the result of an effort to obtain, collect, or win
the burglar's haul
the quantity of fish taken in a single draft of a net
the act or process of transporting something in a vehicle : transportation by hauling
a rail haul meant that several hundred expensive … cars would have to be bought—N. M. Clark
the length or course of a transportation route
a long haul
a quantity transported : load
a haul of lumber
verb
transitive verb
to cause (something) to move by pulling or drawing : to exert traction on
haul a wagon
to obtain or move by or as if by hauling
was hauled to parties night after night by his wife
to transport in a vehicle : cart trucks hauling freight
The cattle were hauled to market.
to change the course of (a ship) especially so as to sail closer to the wind
to bring before an authority for interrogation or judgment : hale
haul traffic violators into court
intransitive verb
to exert traction : pull
haul back on the reins
to move along : proceed the bull hauled back for another lunge—F. B. Gipson
about three o'clock we hauled into Moonridge—Kenneth Clark
to furnish transportation
a nominal charge for hauling
of the wind shift
noun
the act or process of hauling (see haul entry 1) : pull
The rope stood up under the strain of the haul.
a device for pulling or carting something : a device for hauling
the result of an effort to obtain, collect, or win
the burglar's haul
the quantity of fish taken in a single draft of a net
the act or process of transporting something in a vehicle : transportation by hauling
a rail haul meant that several hundred expensive … cars would have to be bought—N. M. Clark
the length or course of a transportation route
a long haul
a quantity transported : load
a haul of lumber
Verb and Noun Middle English halen to pull, from Anglo-French haler, of Germanic origin; akin to Middle Dutch halen to pull; akin to Old English geholian to obtain
The first known use of haul was in the 13th century
haul1 of 2verb
to pull or drag with effort : draw
haul a cart
to obtain or move by or as if by hauling
to transport in a vehicle
to bring before an authority : hale
hauled him into court
haul2 of 2noun
the act or process of hauling : pull
an amount collected : take
a burglar's haul
the amount of fish taken in a single drawing of a net
the distance over which a load is hauled
a long haul
1 They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
2 The car was hauled away to the junkyard.
3 We used buckets to haul water up from the river.
4 She hauled herself to her feet and limped home.
5 I'm tired of hauling this heavy camera around with me.
6 The prisoner was hauled away in handcuffs.
7 They hauled her off to court.
8 The cattle were hauled by rail.
9 The company has a fleet of trucks that are used to haul freight.
10 each haul of the rope
11 Authorities seized the drugs in one of the biggest drug hauls in the history of the county.
12 The kids always collect a substantial haul of candy on Halloween.
13 It's just a short haul from our cabin to the beach.
14 The streaming service earned 91 nominations for this year's Emmy Awards, second only to HBO, which hauled 111, and well ahead of Hulu's 18 and Amazon's 16 according to Business Insider.
15 Hundreds of people, including prominent intellectuals, had signed the charter by the time Mr Liu was hauled away to his cell.