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All heave synonyms

heave
H h

verb heave

  • hurl β€” to throw or fling with great force or vigor.
  • tug β€” to pull at with force, vigor, or effort.
  • breathe β€” When people or animals breathe, they take air into their lungs and let it out again. When they breathe smoke or a particular kind of air, they take it into their lungs and let it out again as they breathe.
  • huff β€” a mood of sulking anger; a fit of resentment: Just because you disagree, don't walk off in a huff.
  • groan β€” a low, mournful sound uttered in pain or grief: the groans of dying soldiers.
  • spew β€” to discharge the contents of the stomach through the mouth; vomit.
  • vomit β€” to eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; regurgitate; throw up.
  • puff β€” a short, quick blast, as of wind or breath.
  • sling β€” an iced alcoholic drink, typically containing gin, water, sugar, and lemon or lime juice.
  • fling β€” to throw, cast, or hurl with force or violence: to fling a stone.
  • haul β€” to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag: They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
  • hoist β€” to hoist.
  • pull β€” pull media
  • raise β€” to move to a higher position; lift up; elevate: to raise one's hand; sleepy birds raising their heads and looking about.
  • launch β€” to set (a boat or ship) in the water.
  • toss β€” Terminal Oriented Social Science
  • chuck β€” When you chuck something somewhere, you throw it there in a casual or careless way.
  • send β€” to cause, permit, or enable to go: to send a messenger; They sent their son to college.
  • cast β€” The cast of a play or film is all the people who act in it.
  • drag β€” drag and drop
  • pitch β€” to smear or cover with pitch.
  • boost β€” If one thing boosts another, it causes it to increase, improve, or be more successful.
  • heft β€” weight; heaviness: It was a rather flimsy chair, without much heft to it.
  • palpitate β€” to pulsate with unusual rapidity from exertion, emotion, disease, etc.; flutter: His heart palpitated wildly.
  • dilate β€” to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • pant β€” to breathe hard and quickly, as after exertion.
  • throb β€” to beat with increased force or rapidity, as the heart under the influence of emotion or excitement; palpitate.
  • swell β€” to grow in bulk, as by the absorption of moisture or the processes of growth.
  • rise β€” to get up from a lying, sitting, or kneeling posture; assume an upright position: She rose and walked over to greet me. With great effort he rose to his knees.
  • puke β€” vomit.
  • surge β€” a strong, wavelike, forward movement, rush, or sweep: the onward surge of an angry mob.
  • sob β€” to weep with a convulsive catching of the breath.
  • disgorge β€” to eject or throw out from the throat, mouth, or stomach; vomit forth.
  • billow β€” When something made of cloth billows, it swells out and moves slowly in the wind.
  • gag β€” to introduce usually comic interpolations into (a script, an actor's part, or the like) (usually followed by up).
  • sign β€” a token; indication.
  • retch β€” to make efforts to vomit.
  • upchuck β€” If you upchuck, food and drink comes back up from your stomach and out through your mouth.
  • suspire β€” to sigh.
  • throw up β€” to propel or cast in any way, especially to project or propel from the hand by a sudden forward motion or straightening of the arm and wrist: to throw a ball.
  • spit up β€” to eject saliva from the mouth; expectorate.
  • yank β€” an abrupt, vigorous pull; jerk.
  • lug β€” Linux User Group
  • lift β€” to move or bring (something) upward from the ground or other support to a higher position; hoist.

noun heave

  • lurch β€” Archaic. the act of lurking or state of watchfulness.
  • motion β€” the action or process of moving or of changing place or position; movement.
  • roll β€” to move along a surface by revolving or turning over and over, as a ball or a wheel.
  • listing β€” a careening, or leaning to one side, as of a ship.
  • stagger β€” to walk, move, or stand unsteadily.
  • wobble β€” to incline to one side and to the other alternately, as a wheel, top, or other rotating body when not properly balanced.
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