different between hatchback vs hatch

hatchback

English

Etymology

hatch +? back

Noun

hatchback (plural hatchbacks)

  1. A car with a sloping, hinged rear door that opens upwards.
  2. The door itself.

Quotations

  • 2007, Siobhan Ryan, "Hit and run driver kills cyclist", The Argus, 21 July,
    The accident happened in Lottbridge Drove, Eastbourne, when the 26-year-old male victim was struck by a small dark hatchback.

Translations

See also

  • fastback
  • notchback

Spanish

Noun

hatchback m (plural hatchbacks)

  1. hatchback

hatchback From the web:

  • what hatchback means
  • what hatchback should i buy
  • what hatchback has the best gas mileage
  • what hatchback has the most cargo space
  • what hatchbacks are awd
  • what hatchback has the most horsepower
  • what hatchback has the biggest boot
  • what hatchback cars


hatch

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: h?ch, IPA(key): /hæt?/
  • Hyphenation: hatch
  • Rhymes: -æt?

Etymology 1

From Middle English hacche, hache, from Old English hæ?, from Proto-West Germanic *hakkju (compare Dutch hek ‘gate, railing’, Low German Heck ‘pasture gate, farmyard gate’), variant of *haggju ‘hedge’. More at hedge.

Noun

hatch (plural hatches)

  1. A horizontal door in a floor or ceiling.
  2. A trapdoor.
  3. An opening in a wall at window height for the purpose of serving food or other items. A pass through.
  4. A small door in large mechanical structures and vehicles such as aircraft and spacecraft often provided for access for maintenance.
  5. (nautical) An opening through the deck of a ship or submarine
  6. (slang) A gullet.
  7. A frame or weir in a river, for catching fish.
  8. A floodgate; a sluice gate.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Ainsworth to this entry?)
  9. (Scotland) A bedstead.
  10. (mining) An opening into, or in search of, a mine.
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

hatch (third-person singular simple present hatches, present participle hatching, simple past and past participle hatched)

  1. (transitive) To close with a hatch or hatches.

Etymology 2

From Middle English hacche, hacchen (to propagate), from Old English hæ??an, ?ha??ian (to peck out; hatch), from Proto-Germanic *hakjan?.

Cognate with German hecken ‘to breed, spawn’, Danish hække (to hatch), Swedish häcka (to breed); akin to Latvian kakale ‘penis’.

Verb

hatch (third-person singular simple present hatches, present participle hatching, simple past and past participle hatched)

  1. (intransitive) (of young animals) To emerge from an egg.
  2. (intransitive) (of eggs) To break open when a young animal emerges from it.
  3. (transitive) To incubate eggs; to cause to hatch.
  4. (transitive) To devise.
Derived terms
  • hatchling
Translations
References

Noun

hatch (plural hatches)

  1. The act of hatching.
  2. (figuratively) Development; disclosure; discovery.
  3. (poultry) A group of birds that emerged from eggs at a specified time.
  4. (often as mayfly hatch) The phenomenon, lasting 1–2 days, of large clouds of mayflies appearing in one location to mate, having reached maturity.
    • a. 1947, Edward R. Hewitt, quoted in 1947, Charles K. Fox, Redistribution of the Green Drake, 1997, Norm Shires, Jim Gilford (editors), Limestone Legends, page 104,
      The Willowemoc above Livington Manor had the largest mayfly hatch I ever knew about fifty years ago.
  5. (informal) A birth, the birth records (in the newspaper) — compare the phrase "hatched, matched, and dispatched."
Translations

Etymology 3

From Middle French hacher (to chop, slice up, incise with fine lines), from Old French hacher, hachier, from Frankish *hak?n, *hakk?n, from Proto-Germanic *hakk?n? (to chop; hack). More at hack.

Verb

hatch (third-person singular simple present hatches, present participle hatching, simple past and past participle hatched)

  1. (transitive) To shade an area of (a drawing, diagram, etc.) with fine parallel lines, or with lines which cross each other (cross-hatch).
    • 1695, John Dryden (translator), Observations on the Art of Painting by Charles Alphonse du Fresnoy
      Those hatching strokes of the pencil.
  2. (transitive, obsolete) To cross; to spot; to stain; to steep.
    • His weapon hatch'd in blood.
Translations

See also

  • Hatch End

Further reading

  • Hatch in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)

Anagrams

  • Thach, tchah

hatch From the web:

  • what hatches from a butterfly egg
  • what hatches
  • what hatches from eggs
  • what hatchery does atwoods use
  • what hatches from 12km eggs
  • what hatches from 10km eggs
  • what hatches from 12k eggs
  • what hatches out of an egg
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like