Antonyms for haled


Grammar : Verb
Spell : heyl
Phonetic Transcription : heɪl


Definition of haled

Origin :
  • "healthy," Old English hal "healthy, entire, uninjured" (see health). The Scottish and northern English form of whole; it was given a literary sense of "free from infirmity" (1734). Related: Haleness.
  • As in drag : verb haul something to a new place
Example sentences :
  • He would have clutched the doctor, and haled him forth by force in bedgown and slippers as he was.
  • Extract from : « Captain Blood » by Rafael Sabatini
  • But Gilles took him by the nape of his dirty neck and haled him back into the room.
  • Extract from : « Bardelys the Magnificent » by Rafael Sabatini
  • It was not to advise me of her capture that he had had me haled into his odious presence.
  • Extract from : « The Shame of Motley » by Raphael Sabatini
  • On this account he was haled before the disciplinary committee of the faculty.
  • Extract from : « In a Little Town » by Rupert Hughes
  • As a result, Blake was haled before the magistrates and committed for trial.
  • Extract from : « Highways & Byways in Sussex » by E.V. Lucas
  • And I haled into her hand the gold pieces and the silver crown.
  • Extract from : « In Convent Walls » by Emily Sarah Holt
  • If only he had never seen her that haled him to his undoing!
  • Extract from : « In Convent Walls » by Emily Sarah Holt
  • But there was no appeal; and on my arrival I was haled before the authorities.
  • Extract from : « Tracks of a Rolling Stone » by Henry J. Coke
  • In the Congo they are haled by the tom-tom, which is the wireless of the woods.
  • Extract from : « An African Adventure » by Isaac F. Marcosson
  • They are not only haled before the Star Chamber to be rebuked by Laud.
  • Extract from : « The Agrarian Problem in the Sixteenth Century » by Richard Henry Tawney

Synonyms for haled

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019