Holdens


[hohl-duh n] /ˈhoʊl dən/

noun
1.
a city in central Massachusetts.
/ˈhəʊldən/
verb
1.
(archaic or dialect) a past participle of hold1

Read Also:

  • Holder

    [hohl-der] /ˈhoʊl dər/ noun 1. something that or secures: a pencil holder. 2. a person who has the ownership, possession, or use of something; owner; tenant. 3. Law. a person who has the legal right to enforce a negotiable instrument. /ˈhəʊldə/ noun 1. a person or thing that holds 2. 3. (law) a person who […]

  • Holder-condition

    [hel-der; German hœl-duh r] /ˈhɛl dər; German ˈhœl dər/ noun, Mathematics. 1. .

  • Holder-in-due-course

    noun 1. a person who has received a negotiable instrument in good faith and without notice that it is overdue, that there is any prior claim, or that there is a defect in the title of the person who negotiated it.

  • Holderlin

    [hœl-duh r-leen] /ˈhœl dərˌlin/ noun 1. Johann Christian Friedrich [yoh-hahn kris-tee-ahn free-drikh] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈkrɪs tiˌɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1770–1843, German poet. /German ˈhœldərliːn/ noun 1. Friedrich (ˈfriːdrɪç). 1770–1843, German lyric poet, whose works include the poems Menon’s Lament for Diotima and Bread and Wine and the novel Hyperion (1797–99)

  • Hold everything

    sentence Stop what you are doing; let’s stop right now: Hold everything, here’s new evidence! (1924+) Also, hold it. Stop, wait. These expressions are usually used in the imperative, as in Hold everything, we can’t unload the truck yet, or Hold it, you’ve gone far enough. [ First half of 1900s ]


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