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  1. Dictionary
    hale
    /heɪl/

    verb

    • 1. drag or draw forcibly: archaic "he haled an old man out of the audience"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. If you're hale, youre strong and in good health. Think " hale and hearty," the well-known phrase to describe someone who can lift a piano or work ten hours in a field without blinking an eye. Don't confuse hale with hail. Hale, again, is healthy.

  3. The meaning of HALE is free from defect, disease, or infirmity : sound; also : retaining exceptional health and vigor. How to use hale in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Hale.

  4. Define hale. hale synonyms, hale pronunciation, hale translation, English dictionary definition of hale. healthy; robust; vigorous; sound: The old man is still hale and hearty. Not to be confused with: hail – cheer, salute, acclaim: hail, Caesar; attract: hail...

  5. hale. (heɪl ) adjective [usually verb-link ADJECTIVE] If you describe people, especially people who are old, as hale, you mean that they are healthy. [old-fashioned] She is remarkable and I'd like to see her remain hale and hearty for years yet.

  6. Hale definition: free from disease or infirmity; robust; vigorous. See examples of HALE used in a sentence.

  7. Representing a Northern dialectal form of Old English hāl (“whole”), perhaps influenced by Old Norse heill (Webster's suggests ‘partly from Old English, partly from Old Norse’), both from Proto-Germanic *hailaz, from Proto-Indo-European *kóh₂ilus (“healthy, whole”). Compare whole, hail (adjective). From Wiktionary.

  8. Jun 25, 2024 · hale (third-person singular simple present hales, present participle haling, simple past and past participle haled) To drag or pull, especially forcibly . Translations.

  9. Hale definition: free from disease or infirmity; robust; vigorous. See examples of HALE used in a sentence.

  10. 1. sickly. hale2 (hāl), v.t., haled, hal•ing. to compel (someone) to go: to hale a man into court. to haul; pull. Gmc; compare Dutch halen to pull, fetch; akin to Old English geholian to get, German holen to fetch. See haul. Middle French haler.

  11. (Definition of hale from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)