hook
1a curved or angular piece of metal or other hard substance for catching, pulling, holding, or suspending something.
a fishhook.
something that attracts attention or serves as an enticement: The product is good but we need a sales hook to get people to buy it.
something having a sharp curve, bend, or angle at one end, as a mark or symbol.
a sharp curve or angle in the length or course of anything.
a curved arm of land jutting into the water; a curved peninsula: the neighborhood of Red Hook, Brooklyn, situated on a peninsula in upper New York Bay.
a recurved and pointed organ or appendage of an animal or plant.
a small curved catch inserted into a loop to form a clothes fastener.
Sports.
the path described by a ball, as in baseball, bowling, or golf, that curves in a direction opposite to the throwing hand or to the side of the ball from which it was struck.
a ball describing such a path.
Boxing. a short, circular punch delivered with the elbow bent.
Music.
an appealing melodic phrase, orchestral ornament, refrain, etc., often important to a popular song's commercial success.
Metalworking. an accidental short bend formed in a piece of bar stock during rolling.
hooks, Slang. hands or fingers: Get your hooks off that cake!
Underworld Slang. a pickpocket.
Also called deck hook .Nautical. a triangular plate or knee that binds together the stringers and plating at each end of a vessel.
to seize, fasten, suspend from, pierce, or catch hold of and draw with or as if with a hook.
to catch (fish) with a fishhook.
Slang. to steal or seize by stealth.
Informal. to catch or trick by artifice; snare.
(of a bull or other horned animal) to catch on the horns or attack with the horns.
to catch hold of and draw (loops of yarn) through cloth with or as if with a hook.
to make (a rug, garment, etc.) in this fashion.
Sports. to hit or throw (a ball) so that a hook results.
Boxing. to deliver a hook with: The champion hooked a right to his opponent's jaw.
Rugby. to push (a ball) backward with the foot in scrummage from the front line.
to make hook-shaped; crook.
to become attached or fastened by or as if by a hook.
to curve or bend like a hook.
Sports.
(of a player) to hook the ball.
(of a ball) to describe a hook in course.
Slang. to depart hastily: We'd better hook for home.
hook up,
to fasten with a hook or hooks.
to assemble or connect, as the components of a machine: They helped me hook up my new home security system.
to connect to a central source, as of power or water: The house hasn't been hooked up to the city's water system yet.
Informal. to join, meet, or become associated with: He never had a decent job until he hooked up with this company.
Informal. to have casual sex or a romantic date without a long-term commitment: He doesn't know her very well, but he hooked up with her a couple of times.
Slang. to supply something scarce or illicit to: My supply of painkillers is totally dry—do you know somebody who can hook me up?The concert is sold out, but my sister knows a guy in the band, so we’re hoping she can hook us up with some tickets.
Idioms about hook
by hook or by crook, by any means, whether just or unjust, legal or illegal.: Also by hook or crook .
get / give the hook, Informal. to receive or subject to a dismissal: The rumor is that he got the hook.
hook, line, and sinker, Informal. entirely; completely: He fell for the story—hook, line, and sinker.
off the hook,
out of trouble; released from some difficulty: This time there was no one around to get him off the hook.
free of obligation: Her brother paid all her bills and got her off the hook.
Slang. extremely or shockingly excellent: Wow, that song is off the hook!
on one's own hook, Informal. on one's own initiative or responsibility; independently.
on the hook, Slang.
subjected to a delaying tactic; waiting: We've had him on the hook for two weeks now.
Origin of hook
1Other words from hook
- hookless, adjective
- hooklike, adjective
Words that may be confused with hook
- penance, pennants
Words Nearby hook
Other definitions for hook (2 of 2)
Slang. to work as a prostitute.
Origin of hook
2Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use hook in a sentence
The package comes with everything you’ll need to hook it up and keep your kitchen clean every night.
Small dishwashers that fit in almost any kitchen | PopSci Commerce Team | August 25, 2020 | Popular-ScienceBurglar alarms could even be hooked up to phones, he continues.
In a press release Julio D’Arcy, who led the study, said 50 bricks hooked up to a solar panel could provide emergency lighting for 5 hours.
So if you want to make people open the entire post, you need to use the first two lines to write a captivating hook.
What will make your brand stand out on LinkedIn in 2020? | Harikrishna Kundariya | August 12, 2020 | Search Engine WatchIf city leaders make a misstep, ratepayers could be on the hook in the future.
The City Is Walking a Fine Line in Demanding Millions From Its Next Power Provider | MacKenzie Elmer | August 7, 2020 | Voice of San Diego
“I think for trans men who are dating every time they hook up they have another coming out,” Sandler said.
If the oft-talked-about college “hook-up culture” could be embodied by a place, it would be Shooters.
Random Hook-Ups or Dry Spells: Why Millennials Flunk College Dating | Ellie Schaack | January 1, 2015 | THE DAILY BEASTBut Kent will not let us off the familiar horror hook so easily.
They “hook up” in a manner that makes the casual sex of the 1960s seem like an arranged marriage in Oman.
Up to a Point: They Made Me Write About Lena Dunham | P. J. O’Rourke | December 13, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTWhen you met him on Tinder were you initially thinking of this as a hook-up or a relationship?
Exclusive: Michael Phelps’s Intersex Self-Proclaimed Girlfriend, Taylor Lianne Chandler, Tells All | Aurora Snow | November 26, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTOnly then did I own that by hook or by crook—and mostly by crook, I was forced to suspect—they had purposely given me the slip.
Raw Gold | Bertrand W. SinclairHis face was hidden beneath a beard of bristling, bushy red, and he had a sharp hook nose and small, bright eyes.
The Soldier of the Valley | Nelson LloydThe sailors tried to catch some with a hook and line, and were fortunate enough to succeed.
A Woman's Journey Round the World | Ida PfeifferThe launch was already under way, and young Cargill trying to avoid it better, thrust with his boat-hook at the side of the lock.
Uncanny Tales | VariousIt was the merest baby—half-an-ounce, perhaps—and it fell from the hook into the herbage some yards from the stream.
Uncanny Tales | Various
British Dictionary definitions for hook
/ (hʊk) /
a piece of material, usually metal, curved or bent and used to suspend, catch, hold, or pull something
short for fish-hook
a trap or snare
mainly US something that attracts or is intended to be an attraction
something resembling a hook in design or use
a sharp bend or angle in a geological formation, esp a river
a sharply curved spit of land
boxing a short swinging blow delivered from the side with the elbow bent
cricket a shot in which the ball is hit square on the leg side with the bat held horizontally
golf a shot that causes the ball to swerve sharply from right to left
surfing the top of a breaking wave
Also called: hookcheck ice hockey the act of hooking an opposing player
music a stroke added to the stem of a written or printed note to indicate time values shorter than a crotchet
a catchy musical phrase in a pop song
another name for a sickle
a nautical word for anchor
by hook or crook or by hook or by crook by any means
get the hook US and Canadian slang to be dismissed from employment
hook, line, and sinker informal completely: he fell for it hook, line, and sinker
off the hook
slang out of danger; free from obligation or guilt
(of a telephone receiver) not on the support, so that incoming calls cannot be received
on one's own hook slang, mainly US on one's own initiative
on the hook slang
waiting
in a dangerous or difficult situation
sling one's hook British slang to leave
(often foll by up) to fasten or be fastened with or as if with a hook or hooks
(tr) to catch (something, such as a fish) on a hook
to curve like or into the shape of a hook
(tr) (of bulls, elks, etc) to catch or gore with the horns
(tr) to make (a rug) by hooking yarn through a stiff fabric backing with a special instrument
(tr often foll by down) to cut (grass or herbage) with a sickle: to hook down weeds
boxing to hit (an opponent) with a hook
ice hockey to impede (an opposing player) by catching hold of him with the stick
golf to play (a ball) with a hook
rugby to obtain and pass (the ball) backwards from a scrum to a member of one's team, using the feet
cricket to play (a ball) with a hook
(tr) informal to trick
(tr) a slang word for steal
hook it slang to run or go quickly away
Origin of hook
1- See also hook-up
Derived forms of hook
- hookless, adjective
- hooklike, adjective
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with hook
In addition to the idioms beginning with hook
- hook or crook
- hook up
also see:
- by hook or crook
- off the hook
- on one's own account (hook)
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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