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  1. Our free wedding planning website and guides can help you with every aspect of getting married from the engagement through to your honeymoon. We have wedding information for the bride, groom, best man, bridesmaids, ushers, receptions, directory of wedding services, jokes, speeches, traditions, myths, rings and much more.

  2. a. : to catch or fasten by or as if by a hook or knot. hitched his horse to the fence post. b (1) : to connect (a vehicle or implement) with a source of motive power. hitch a rake to a tractor. (2) : to attach (a source of motive power) to a vehicle or instrument. hitch the horses to the wagon.

  3. May 24, 2024 · Simply put, the idiom means to get married. "Hitched" is when something is connected, attached or joined to something else. As such it makes sense that the "getting hitched" definition relates to two people joining as one in marriage. READ MORE.

  4. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Marriage, cohabitation & other relationships. adulteress. affinal. as husband and wife idiom. be an item idiom. be shacked up idiom. have an affair. have something going with someone idiom.

  5. She hitched herself into a sitting position. [transitive] hitch something (to something) to tie or fasten something to something else with a rope, a hook , etc. She hitched the pony to the gate.

  6. Britannica Dictionary definition of HITCH. 1. [+ object] : to attach, fasten, or connect (something) with a hook, knot, etc. hitch a trailer to a car. He hitched his horse to a post outside the saloon. = He tied his horse to a hitching post outside the saloon. 2.

  7. be hitched to The horses were hitched to a shiny, black carriage. hitch something (on)to something We just need to hitch the trailer (on)to the car and then we can go. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

  8. hitch. verb. /hɪtʃ/. Verb Forms. [transitive, intransitive] to get a free ride in a person's car; to travel around in this way, by standing at the side of the road and trying to get passing cars to stop hitch something They hitched a ride in a truck. (+ adv./prep.) We spent the summer hitching around New England.

  9. hitch1 /hɪtʃ/ v. to fasten or tie by means of a rope or strap; tether:[ ~ + object] to hitch a horse to a post. to harness (an animal) to a vehicle: [ ~ + object] He hitched the horse to the carriage. [ ~ + up + object] He hitched up the horse to the carriage. [ ~ + object + up] He hitched the horse up to the carriage.

  10. 1. to fasten or become fastened with a knot or tie, esp temporarily. 2. (often foll by up) to connect (a horse, team, etc); harness. 3. (transitive; often foll by up) to pull up (the trousers, a skirt, etc) with a quick jerk. 4. (intransitive) mainly US. to move in a halting manner. to hitch along.

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