List of antonyms from "has the law on" to antonyms from "hassled"


Discover our 376 antonyms available for the terms "hash up, hasped, has words, has the say, has weakness for, has the law on" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « hashed »

  • As in mashed : adj crushed
  • As in argue : verb verbally fight
  • As in mangle : verb mutilate, deform
  • As in mash : verb smash, squash
  • As in mince : verb chop up
  • As in chop : verb cut up with tool
  • As in cut : verb sever, chop with sharp instrument; incise
  • As in analyze : verb examine and determine
Example sentences :
  • "Go to bed, my little son, since you have got hashed," said she.
  • Extract from : « White Lies » by Charles Reade
  • Currant-jelly is a good accompaniment to roasted or hashed meats.
  • Extract from : « The Cook's Oracle; and Housekeeper's Manual » by William Kitchiner
  • The meat will have to be hashed to-morrow, as it's been carved so disgracefully.
  • Extract from : « Dimbie and I--and Amelia » by Mabel Barnes-Grundy
  • Widgeons are hashed in the same manner as described for wild duck.
  • Extract from : « The Gastronomic Regenerator: » by Alexis Soyer
  • I guess we three hashed over every little incident of our trips.
  • Extract from : « Over the Seas for Uncle Sam » by Elaine Sterne
  • He was just meat for the natives to have fun with, and he has sure been hashed up on this trip.
  • Extract from : « Peck's Bad Boy With the Cowboys » by George W. Peck
  • And with them I'd have hashed brown potatoes; that rule I know by heart.
  • Extract from : « The Fun of Cooking » by Caroline French Benton
  • The meat is roast or boiled, hot or cold, sometimes fried or hashed.
  • Extract from : « Town Life in Australia » by R. E. N. (Richard) Twopeny
  • We don't want any old silly stuff that has been hashed over and over, we want a big new idea to plant in our hearts.
  • Extract from : « A Girl Of The Limberlost » by Gene Stratton Porter
  • She asked him whether he would have hashed mutton or cold beef, and allowed him to pour a little sherry into her wine-glass.
  • Extract from : « John Caldigate » by Anthony Trollope