Haggard


[hag-erd] /ˈhæg ərd/

adjective
1.
having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn:
the haggard faces of the tired troops.
2.
wild; wild-looking:
haggard eyes.
3.
Falconry. (especially of a hawk caught after it has attained adult plumage) untamed.
noun
4.
Falconry. a wild or untamed hawk caught after it has assumed adult plumage.
[hag-erd] /ˈhæg ərd/
noun
1.
(Sir) H(enry) Rider, 1856–1925, English novelist.
/ˈhæɡəd/
adjective
1.
careworn or gaunt, as from lack of sleep, anxiety, or starvation
2.
wild or unruly
3.
(of a hawk) having reached maturity in the wild before being caught
noun
4.
(falconry) a hawk that has reached maturity before being caught Compare eyas, passage hawk
/ˈhæɡərd/
noun
1.
(in Ireland and the Isle of Man) an enclosure beside a farmhouse in which crops are stored
/ˈhæɡəd/
noun
1.
Sir (Henry) Rider. 1856–1925, British author of romantic adventure stories, including King Solomon’s Mines (1885)
adj.

1560s, “wild, unruly” (originally in reference to hawks), from Middle French haggard, probably from Old French faulcon hagard “wild falcon,” literally “falcon of the woods,” from Middle High German hag “hedge, copse, wood,” from Proto-Germanic *hagon-, from PIE root *kagh- “to catch, seize;” also “wickerwork, fence” (see hedge). OED, however, finds this whole derivation “very doubtful.” Sense perhaps reinforced by Low German hager “gaunt, haggard.” Sense of “with a haunted expression” first recorded 1690s, that of “careworn” first recorded 1853. Sense influenced by association with hag. Related: Haggardly; haggardness.

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  • Haggardness

    [hag-erd] /ˈhæg ərd/ adjective 1. having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops. 2. wild; wild-looking: haggard eyes. 3. Falconry. (especially of a hawk caught after it has attained adult plumage) untamed. noun 4. Falconry. a wild or untamed hawk caught […]

  • Hagged

    [hagd, hag-id] /hægd, ˈhæg ɪd/ adjective, British Dialect. 1. . 2. (defs 1, 2). adj. c.1700, from hag, by influence of haggard. Originally “bewitched,” also “lean, gaunt,” as bewitched persons and animals were believed to become.

  • Haggis

    [hag-is] /ˈhæg ɪs/ noun, Chiefly Scot. 1. a traditional pudding made of the heart, liver, etc., of a sheep or calf, minced with suet and oatmeal, seasoned, and boiled in the stomach of the animal. /ˈhæɡɪs/ noun 1. a Scottish dish made from sheep’s or calf’s offal, oatmeal, suet, and seasonings boiled in a skin […]

  • Haggish

    [hag] /hæg/ noun 1. an ugly old woman, especially a vicious or malicious one. 2. a witch or sorceress. 3. a . /hæɡ/ noun 1. an unpleasant or ugly old woman 2. a witch 3. short for hagfish 4. (obsolete) a female demon /hæɡ; hɑːɡ/ noun (Scot & Northern English, dialect) 1. a firm spot […]

  • Haggith

    festive; the dancer, a wife of David and the mother of Adonijah (2 Sam. 3:4; 1 Kings 1:5, 11; 2:13; 1 Chr. 3:2), who, like Absalom, was famed for his beauty.


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