Hearty
21hearty — See: HALE AND HEARTY …
22hearty — See: HALE AND HEARTY …
23Hearty — This name, with variant spelling Harty and Hearty, is of Irish origin, and is an Anglicized form of the Gaelic O hA(tha)rtaight , meaning descendant of Faghartach , from the prefix O , meaning grandson or male descendant of , and Faghartach , a… …
24hearty — adj. Hearty is used with these nouns: ↑appetite, ↑breakfast, ↑cheer, ↑chuckle, ↑congratulations, ↑eater, ↑fare, ↑handshake, ↑laugh, ↑laughter, ↑lunch, ↑ …
25hearty — Synonyms and related words: AB, Ancient Mariner, Argonaut, Dylan, Flying Dutchman, Neptune, OD, Poseidon, Varuna, abandoned, ablaze, able seaman, able bodied seaman, abundant, active, acute, affable, affectionate, afire, aggressive, amiable,… …
26hearty — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. comrade; sailor, tar. See friend, navigation. adj. sturdy, robust, strong, well, vigorous, healthy; friendly, cordial; substantial. See feeling, health. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Cordial] Syn. warm,… …
27hearty — See: hale and hearty …
28hearty — [ˈhɑːti] adj 1) friendly and enthusiastic 2) a hearty meal is large …
29hearty, my — Used to a man who is hearty, or brave, and now almost exclusively associated with old time sailors in the plural form ‘my (or me) hearties’. The sailors in the opening scene of Shakespeare’s The Tempest are addressed by the earlier form ‘my… …
30hearty — adj. & n. adj. (heartier, heartiest) 1 strong, vigorous. 2 spirited. 3 (of a meal or appetite) large. 4 warm, friendly. n. 1 a hearty person, esp. one ostentatiously so. 2 (usu. in pl.) (as a form of address) fellows, esp. fellow sailors.… …