halse
English
Pronunciation
- (Northern England) IPA(key): [hoːs], [haːs], [hoːz]
- Rhymes: -ɔːs
Etymology 1
From Middle English hals, from Old English heals (“neck, prow of a ship”), from Proto-West Germanic *hals, from Proto-Germanic *halsaz (“neck”), from Proto-Indo-European *kols-, *ḱols- (“neck”).
Cognate with Dutch hals (“neck, throat”), German Hals (“neck, throat”), Norwegian hals (“neck, throat”), Swedish hals (“neck, throat”), Latin collum (“neck”).
Alternative forms
- hawse (Scotland)
Noun
halse (plural halses)
- (anatomy, archaic) The neck; the throat.
- Well, as you know they used to hang folk by the halse for horse theft.
Derived terms
- halseman
Etymology 2
From Middle English halsen, halchen, from Old English *halsian, *healsian (“to embrace”, literally “to fall upon the neck of”), from heals (“neck”). See above. Cognate with Old Saxon helsjen (“to embrace”), Old High German halsōn (German halsen (“to jibe”)), Icelandic hálsa (“to embrace”).
Alternative forms
- haulse
- halsh (dialectal)
- hawse, hose (Scotland)
Verb
halse (third-person singular simple present halses, present participle halsing, simple past and past participle halsed)
- (dialectal) To fall upon the neck of; hug; embrace.
- 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, “xxj”, in Le Morte Darthur, book VIII:
- soo the Kyng took a lytel hackney and but fewe felauship with him vntyl he came vnto sir Tristrams pauelione / and whanne syre Trystram sawe the Kynge / he ranne vnto hym and wold haue holden his styrope / But the kynge lepte from his hors lyghtly / and eyther halsed other in armes
- (please add an English translation of this quote)
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Related terms
- enhalse
Etymology 3
From Middle English halsen, halsien (“to beseech, adjure”), from Old English healsian, hālsian (“to entreat earnestly, beseech, implore”), from Proto-Germanic *hailisōną (“to greet”), from Proto-Indo-European *kailo-, *kailu- (“whole, safe”).
Cognate with Middle High German heilsen (“to predict”), Swedish hälsa (“to greet”), Icelandic heilsa (“to salute”). More at whole, hailse.
Verb
halse (third-person singular simple present halses, present participle halsing, simple past and past participle halsed)
- (transitive) To greet; salute; hail.
- (transitive) To beseech; adjure.
Related terms
- halsen
Etymology 4
From Middle English hals (“neck”), from Old Norse háls (“neck, part of the forecastle or bow of a ship”), from Proto-Germanic *halsaz (“neck”). See Etymology 1. Cognate with Danish hals (“neck, tack”).
Alternative forms
- hawse
Noun
halse (plural halses)
- Alternative form of hawse
Verb
halse (third-person singular simple present halses, present participle halsing, simple past and past participle halsed)
- (obsolete) To haul; to hoist.
Anagrams
- Hales, Heals, Sahel, Saleh, Selah, hales, heals, leash, selah, shale, sheal
Danish
Noun
halse c
- indefinite plural of hals
Verb
halse (imperative hals, infinitive at halse, present tense halser, past tense halsede, perfect tense har halset)
- bark
- Hunden halser: The dog is barking
- rush
- halse efter: rush after
Synonyms
- (bark): gø
Middle English
Verb
halse
- Alternative form of halsen