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    haul
    /hôl/

    verb

    • 1. (of a person) pull or drag with effort or force: "he hauled his bike out of the shed" Similar dragpulltugheaveOpposite push
    • 2. (of a vehicle) pull (an attached trailer or load) behind it: "the train was hauling a cargo of liquid chemicals"

    noun

    • 1. a quantity of something that was stolen or is possessed illegally: "they escaped with a haul of antiques"
    • 2. a distance to be traversed: "the thirty-mile haul to Tallahassee"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. How to use haul in a sentence. to cause (something) to move by pulling or drawing : to exert traction on; to obtain or move by or as if by hauling… See the full definition

  3. HAUL definition: 1. to pull something heavy slowly and with difficulty: 2. to take something or someone somewhere…. Learn more.

  4. Haul definition: to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag. See examples of HAUL used in a sentence.

  5. A haul is a quantity of things that are stolen, or a quantity of stolen or illegal goods found by police or customs. The size of the drugs haul shows that the international trade in heroin is still flourishing.

  6. n. 1. The act of pulling or dragging. 2. The act of transporting or carting. 3. A distance, especially the distance over which something is pulled or transported.

  7. To haul is to move or take something, usually big and heavy, and put it somewhere else. If you've ever moved to a new house, then you know that having to haul all your stuff there can really take the joy out of moving into a new place.

  8. an amount of something that has been stolen or that is owned illegally: a haul of arms / drugs. be a long haul. to be difficult and take a long time: His return to health will be a long haul.

  9. haul to pull somebody/ something to a particular place with a lot of effort: Fishermen were hauling in their nets. drag or haul? You usually drag something behind you along the ground; you usually haul something towards you, often upwards towards you. Dragging something often needs effort, but hauling something always does.

  10. a large amount of something that has been stolen or that is illegal. a haul of weapons. a drugs haul. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Want to learn more?

  11. haul to pull someone or something to a particular place with a lot of effort: Liz hauled her suitcase up the stairs. drag or haul? You usually drag something behind you along the ground; you usually haul something toward you, often upward toward you.

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