All hashing synonyms
hashΒ·ing
H h verb hashing
- bandy β If you bandy words with someone, you argue with them.
- bicker β When people bicker, they argue or quarrel about unimportant things.
- sass β impudent or disrespectful back talk: Both parents refuse to take any sass from their kids.
- buck β A buck is a US or Australian dollar.
- jump β to spring clear of the ground or other support by a sudden muscular effort; leap: to jump into the air; to jump out a window.
- cross β If you cross something such as a room, a road, or an area of land or water, you move or travel to the other side of it. If you cross to a place, you move or travel over a room, road, or area of land or water in order to reach that place.
- wrangle β to argue or dispute, especially in a noisy or angry manner.
- hassle β a disorderly dispute.
- battle β A battle is a violent fight between groups of people, especially one between military forces during a war.
- row β record
- hammer β Armand, 1898β1990, U.S. businessman and art patron.
- feud β fee (def 4).
- altercate β to argue, esp heatedly; dispute
- hew β to strike forcibly with an ax, sword, or other cutting instrument; chop; hack.
- clip β A clip is a small device, usually made of metal or plastic, that is specially shaped for holding things together.
- fragment β fragmentation
- mangle β to smooth or press with a mangle.
- lop β to let hang or droop: He lopped his arms at his sides in utter exhaustion.
- fell β simple past tense of fall.
- shear β to cut (something).
- truncate β to shorten by cutting off a part; cut short: Truncate detailed explanations.
- sever β to separate (a part) from the whole, as by cutting or the like.
- dice β A dice is a small cube which has between one and six spots or numbers on its sides, and which is used in games to provide random numbers. In old-fashioned English, 'dice' was used only as a plural form, and the singular was die, but now 'dice' is used as both the singular and the plural form.
- axe β An axe is a tool used for cutting wood. It consists of a heavy metal blade which is sharp at one edge and attached by its other edge to the end of a long handle.
- hackle β one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
- slay β to draw (warp ends) through the heddle eyes of the harness or through the dents of the reed in accordance with a given plan for weaving a fabric.
- chip β Chips are long, thin pieces of potato fried in oil or fat and eaten hot, usually with a meal.
- crop β Crops are plants such as wheat and potatoes that are grown in large quantities for food.
- snip β to cut with a small, quick stroke, or a succession of such strokes, with scissors or the like.
- slit β to cut apart or open along a line; make a long cut, fissure, or opening in.
- sliver β a small, slender, often sharp piece, as of wood or glass, split, broken, or cut off, usually lengthwise or with the grain; splinter.
- guillotine β a device for beheading a person by means of a heavy blade that is dropped between two posts serving as guides: widely used during the French Revolution.
- saw β a sententious saying; maxim; proverb: He could muster an old saw for every occasion.
- decussate β to cross or cause to cross in the form of the letter X; intersect
- nick β Old Nick.
- score β the record of points or strokes made by the competitors in a game or match.
- intersect β to cut or divide by passing through or across: The highway intersects the town.
- behead β If someone is beheaded, their head is cut off, usually because they have been found guilty of a crime.
- perforate β to make a hole or holes through by boring, punching, piercing, or the like.
- dissever β to sever; separate.
- gash β a long, deep wound or cut; slash.
- massacre β the unnecessary, indiscriminate killing of a large number of human beings or animals, as in barbarous warfare or persecution or for revenge or plunder.
- saber β a heavy, one-edged sword, usually slightly curved, used especially by cavalry.
- lacerate β to tear roughly; mangle: The barbed wire lacerated his hands.
- mow β Chiefly Northern and North Midland U.S. to store (hay) in a barn.
- slaughter β Frank, 1908β2001, U.S. novelist and physician.
- amputate β To amputate someone's arm or leg means to cut all or part of it off in an operation because it is diseased or badly damaged.
- reap β to cut (wheat, rye, etc.) with a sickle or other implement or a machine, as in harvest.
- pierce β to penetrate into or run through (something), as a sharp, pointed dagger, object, or instrument does.
- prune β a variety of plum that dries without spoiling.