different between hired vs drygulcher
hired
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?ha??d/
- (US) IPA(key): /?ha??d/
Verb
hired
- simple past tense and past participle of hire
Anagrams
- hider, rehid, rheid
Old English
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *h?war?d (“family, marriage”), from Proto-Indo-European *?ey- (“to be lying down”). Cognate with Old High German h?r?t (“marriage”) (German Heirat), Old English h?wen (“household”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?xi?.red/, [?hi?.red]
Noun
h?red m
- family, household
- retinue
- company, brotherhood
Declension
Descendants
- Middle English: hird
- English: hird
hired From the web:
- what hired at 14
- what hired at 13
- what hired at 15
- what hired daedalus
- what hired at 16
- hired meaning
- what hired at 17
- what hired workers
drygulcher
English
Etymology
dry +? gulch +? -er
Pronunciation
Noun
drygulcher (plural drygulchers)
- (slang) In the Wild West, a hired assassin who shoots his targets from a concealed location.
drygulcher From the web:
- what us a dry gulcher
- what is a dry gulcher mean
- dry gulcher definition
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