hunt

[huhnt] /hʌnt/
verb (used with object)
1.
to chase or search for (game or other wild animals) for the purpose of catching or killing.
2.
to pursue with force, hostility, etc., in order to capture (often followed by down):
They hunted him down and hanged him.
3.
to search for; seek; endeavor to obtain or find (often followed by up or out):
to hunt up the most promising candidates for the position.
4.
to search (a place) thoroughly.
5.
to scour (an area) in pursuit of game.
6.
to use or direct (a horse, hound, etc.) in chasing game.
7.
Change Ringing. to alter the place of (a bell) in a hunt.
verb (used without object)
8.
to engage in the pursuit, capture, or killing of wild animals for food or in sport.
9.
to make a search or quest (often followed by for or after).
10.
Change Ringing. to alter the place of a bell in its set according to certain rules.
noun
11.
an act or practice of hunting game or other wild animals.
12.
a search; a seeking or endeavor to find.
13.
a pursuit.
14.
a group of persons associated for the purpose of hunting; an association of hunters.
15.
an area hunted over.
16.
Change Ringing. a regularly varying order of permutations in the ringing of a group of from five to twelve bells.
Origin
before 1000; (v.) Middle English hunten, Old English huntian, derivative of hunta hunter, akin to hentan to pursue; (noun) Middle English, derivative of the v.
Related forms
huntable, adjective
huntedly, adverb
outhunt, verb (used with object)
overhunt, verb (used with object)
unhuntable, adjective
unhunted, adjective
Synonyms
1. pursue, track.

Hunt

[huhnt] /hʌnt/
noun
1.
(James Henry) Leigh
[lee] /li/ (Show IPA),
1784–1859, English essayist, poet, and editor.
2.
Richard Morris, 1828–95, U.S. architect.
3.
(William) Holman
[hohl-muh n] /ˈhoʊl mən/ (Show IPA),
1827–1910, English painter.
4.
William Morris, 1824–79, U.S. painter (brother of Richard Morris Hunt).
Examples from the web for hunt
  • Stencil a basic measuring system onto the board cover, and you'll never need to hunt down a measuring stick.
  • Workers had to hunt down original materials and replicate old techniques to match the original design of the building.
  • The dog that is forced into the wood will not hunt many deer.
  • For every natural action, every motion and process of nature, is nothing else than a hunt.
  • Large carnivorous animals both hunt and scavenge food.
  • First, he attempted to hunt some sparrows in one of our neighbor's trees but they proved too quick for him.
  • The kennel housed many old dogs, some that wouldn't hunt and others that couldn't be taught new tricks.
  • He likes the weather, the space and the freedom to hunt.
  • If he set up the account with no personal details, the hunt may be impossible.
  • The goal of holding wrongdoers accountable now risks being subsumed by a partisan witch-hunt.
British Dictionary definitions for hunt

hunt

/hʌnt/
verb
1.
to seek out and kill or capture (game or wild animals) for food or sport
2.
(intransitive) often foll by for. to look (for); search (for): to hunt for a book, to hunt up a friend
3.
(transitive) to use (hounds, horses, etc) in the pursuit of wild animals, game, etc: to hunt a pack of hounds
4.
(transitive) to search or draw (country) to hunt wild animals, game, etc: to hunt the parkland
5.
(transitive) often foll by down. to track or chase diligently, esp so as to capture: to hunt down a criminal
6.
(transitive; usually passive) to persecute; hound
7.
(intransitive) (of a gauge indicator, engine speed, etc) to oscillate about a mean value or position
8.
(intransitive) (of an aircraft, rocket, etc) to oscillate about a flight path
noun
9.
the act or an instance of hunting
10.
chase or search, esp of animals or game
11.
the area of a hunt
12.
a party or institution organized for the pursuit of wild animals or game, esp for sport
13.
the participants in or members of such a party or institution
14.
(informal) in the hunt, having a chance of success: that result keeps us in the hunt See also hunt down, hunt up
Derived Forms
huntedly, adverb
Word Origin
Old English huntian; related to Old English hentan, Old Norse henda to grasp

Hunt

/hʌnt/
noun
1.
Henry, known as Orator Hunt. 1773–1835, British radical, who led the mass meeting that ended in the Peterloo Massacre (1819)
2.
(William) Holman. 1827–1910, British painter; a founder of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (1848)
3.
James. 1947–93, British motor-racing driver: world champion 1976
4.
(Henry Cecil) John, Baron. 1910–98, British army officer and mountaineer. He planned and led the expedition that first climbed Mount Everest (1953)
5.
(James Henry) Leigh (liː). 1784–1859, British poet and essayist: a founder of The Examiner (1808) in which he promoted the work of Keats and Shelley
Word Origin and History for hunt
v.

Old English huntian "chase game," related to hentan "to seize," from Proto-Germanic *huntojan (cf. Gothic hinþan "to seize, capture," Old High German hunda "booty"), from PIE *kend-.

General sense of "search diligently" (for anything) is first recorded c.1200. Related: Hunted; hunting. Happy hunting-grounds "Native American afterlife paradise" is from "Last of the Mohicans" (1826).

n.

early 12c., from hunt (v.). Meaning "body of persons associated for the purpose of hunting with a pack of hounds" is first recorded 1570s.

Idioms and Phrases with hunt