wretched hovel

  • 1hovel — n. a miserable, wretched hovel * * * [ hɒv(ə)l] wretched hovel a miserable …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 2hovel — /ˈhɒvəl / (say hovuhl) noun 1. a small, mean dwelling house; a wretched hut. 2. an open shed, as for sheltering cattle, tools, etc. –verb (t) (hovelled or, US, hoveled, hovelling or, US, hoveling) 3. Obsolete to shelter or lodge as …

  • 3hovel — /huv euhl, hov /, n., v., hoveled, hoveling or (esp. Brit.) hovelled, hovelling. n. 1. a small, very humble dwelling house; a wretched hut. 2. any dirty, disorganized dwelling. 3. an open shed, as for sheltering cattle or tools. v.t. 4. to… …

    Universalium

  • 4hovel — noun Etymology: Middle English Date: 15th century 1. an open shed or shelter 2. tabernacle 3. a small, wretched, and often dirty house ; hut …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 5hovel — n 1. hole, hole in the ground, dump, sty, pigsty, pigpen, tumbledown shack, wretched hut; hut, hutch, shack, shanty, Brit. bothy; cottage, cot, bungalow, bower, cabin, Brit. Dial. cote, Scot. but and ben. 2. shed, open shed, tool shed, work shed …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 6The Cottager and his Cat — is an Icelandic fairy tale collected in Islandische Marchen . Andrew Lang included it in The Crimson Fairy Book . [Andrew Lang, The Crimson Fairy Book , [http://www.mythfolklore.net/andrewlang/243.htm The Cottager and his Cat ] ] ynopsisA man… …

    Wikipedia

  • 7William Orr — (1766 ndash; 1797) was a member of the United Irishmen who was executed in 1797 in what was widely believed at the time to be judicial murder and whose memory led to the rallying cry “ Remember Orr ” during the 1798 rebellion. Speeches From the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 8miserable — adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin miserabilis wretched, pitiable, from miserari to pity, from miser Date: 15th century 1. being in a pitiable state of distress or unhappiness (as from want or shame) < miserable&#8230; …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 9Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare — infobox Book | name = Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare title orig = translator = image caption = author = Edith Nesbit cover artist = country = United Kingdom language = English genre = Children s novel publisher = T. Fisher Unwin release date …

    Wikipedia

  • 10pitiful — pitifully, adv. pitifulness, n. /pit i feuhl/, adj. 1. evoking or deserving pity: a pitiful fate. 2. evoking or deserving contempt by smallness, poor quality, etc.: pitiful attempts. 3. Archaic. full of pity; compassionate. [1400 50; late ME; see …

    Universalium