<span class="searchmatch">took</span> <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> <span class="searchmatch">hook</span> simple past of take <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>...
take <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> <span class="searchmatch">hook</span> (third-person singular simple present takes <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>, present participle taking <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>, simple past <span class="searchmatch">took</span> <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>, past participle...
also: boat-<span class="searchmatch">hook</span> and boat <span class="searchmatch">hook</span> English Wikipedia has an article on: boathook Wikipedia From boat + <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>. boathook (plural boathooks) A <span class="searchmatch">hook</span> attached to...
participle taking, simple past <span class="searchmatch">took</span>, past participle taken or (archaic or Scotland) tane) (transitive) To get into <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> hands, possession, or control...
yellow, till it looked like <span class="searchmatch">one</span> vast bruise, — the stick as tough and substantial as Dinah herself, the handle an immense brass <span class="searchmatch">hook</span> that Squeers himself might...
harpaga, a rare variant of Latin harpagō, from Ancient Greek ἁρπάγη (harpágē, “<span class="searchmatch">hook</span>”), from ἁρπάζω (harpázō, “to snatch away, to carry off, to seize, to captivate”)...
crok, from Old English *crōc (“<span class="searchmatch">hook</span>, bend, crook”), from Proto-West Germanic *krōk, from Proto-Germanic *krōkaz (“bend, <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>”), from Proto-Indo-European...
[…] E. Flesher and J. Macock, for R[ichard] Royston […], and B[enjamin] <span class="searchmatch">Took</span>, […], →OCLC: I put into his Mouth a Raspatory, and, fixing it between the...
fish, fish with a <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>”, literally “to fish-<span class="searchmatch">hook</span>”), perhaps from Old English *anglian, from Proto-West Germanic *anglōn (“to <span class="searchmatch">hook</span>”). Cognate with Saterland...
weight biweight body weight, bodyweight carcass weight carry <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> own weight carry <span class="searchmatch">one's</span> weight carry weight casting weight coin weight combining weight...