different between hew vs hugh
hew
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English hewen, from Old English h?awan, from Proto-West Germanic *hauwan, from Proto-Germanic *hawwan?, from Proto-Indo-European *kewh?- (“to strike, hew, forge”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /hju?/, [çju?]
- Rhymes: -u?
- Homophone: hue
Verb
hew (third-person singular simple present hews, present participle hewing, simple past hewed or (rare) hew, past participle hewed or hewn)
- (transitive, intransitive) To chop away at; to whittle down; to mow down.
- c. 1591, William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 1, Act IV Scene vii[1]:
- Hew them to pieces, hack their bones asunder […]
- 1912: Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan of the Apes, Chapter 6
- Among other things he found a sharp hunting knife, on the keen blade of which he immediately proceeded to cut his finger. Undaunted he continued his experiments, finding that he could hack and hew splinters of wood from the table and chairs with this new toy.
- c. 1591, William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 1, Act IV Scene vii[1]:
- (transitive) To shape; to form.
- to hew out a sepulchre
- Look unto the rock whence ye are hewn.
- December 19, 1734, Alexander Pope, letter to Jonathan Swift
- rather polishing old works than hewing out new
- (transitive, US) To act according to, to conform to; usually construed with to.
- 1905, Albert Osborn, John Fletcher Hurst: A Biography,[2] Jennings & Graham, page 428
- Few men measured up to his standard of righteousness; he hewed to the line.
- 1998, Frank M. Robinson and Lawrence Davidson, Pulp Culture: The Art of Fiction Magazines,[3] Collectors Press, Inc., ?ISBN, page 103
- Inside the stories usually hewed to a consistent formula: no matter how outlandish and weird the circumstances, in the end everything had to have a natural, if not plausible, ending—frequently, though not always, involving a mad scientist.
- 2008, Chester E. Finn, Troublemaker: A Personal History of School Reform Since Sputnik,[4] Princeton University Press, ?ISBN, page 28
- Faculty members and students alike were buzzing with the fashionable nostrums that dominated U.S. education discourse in the late sixties, […] These hewed to the recommendations of the Plowden Report, […]
- King recovered the rights on the condition that he'd stop publicly disparaging Kubrick's version. "For a long time I hewed that line," he told CBS News in June. "And then Mr. Kubrick died. So now I figured, what the hell. I've gone back to saying mean things about it."
- 1905, Albert Osborn, John Fletcher Hurst: A Biography,[2] Jennings & Graham, page 428
Derived terms
- behew
- forhew
- hewer
- rough-hew
Translations
Etymology 2
Noun
hew (countable and uncountable, plural hews)
- (obsolete) hue; colour
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Chaucer to this entry?)
- (obsolete) shape; form
- Whose semblance she did carrie under feigned hew.
- (obsolete) Destruction by cutting down.
Anagrams
- weh
hew From the web:
- what hewo mean
- what hew means
- what jewish holiday is today
- what jewish year is it
- what jewish holiday is today 2021
- what jewelry is in style for 2021
- what jewish holiday is it
- what jewish year is 2021
hugh
hugh From the web:
- what hugh means
- what high school district am i in
- what highway am i on
- what high blood pressure
- what high school did beyonce go to
- what high school musical character am i
- what high school did the rock go to
- what high school was grease filmed at
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- hew vs hugh
- hold vs hugh
- hugh vs giant
- hugo vs hugh
- hughie vs hugh
- huey vs hugh
- zeppelin vs hue
- zeppelin vs administrator
- passenger vs zeppelin
- bomb vs zeppelin
- airship vs zeppelin
- dirigible vs zeppelin
- german vs zeppelin
- zeppelin vs gondola
- zeppelin vs balloon
- medley vs remic
- cmo vs remic
- remic vs tranche
- medley vs charango
- charanga vs charango