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hob
1[ hob ]
noun
- a projection or shelf at the back or side of a fireplace, used for keeping food warm.
- a rounded peg or pin used as a target in quoits and similar games.
- a game in which such a peg is used.
- Machinery. a milling cutter for gear and sprocket teeth, splines, threads, etc., having helically arranged teeth and fed across the work as the work is rotated.
verb (used with or without object)
- Machinery. to cut with a hob.
hob
2[ hob ]
noun
- a hobgoblin or elf.
hob
1/ ɒ /
noun
- the flat top part of a cooking stove, or a separate flat surface, containing hotplates or burners
- a shelf beside an open fire, for keeping kettles, etc, hot
- a steel pattern used in forming a mould or die in cold metal
- a hard steel rotating cutting tool used in machines for cutting gears
verb
- tr to cut or form with a hob
hob
2/ ɒ /
noun
- a hobgoblin or elf
- a male ferret
- raise hob or play hob informal.to cause mischief or disturbance
Derived Forms
- ˈDzˌ, adjective
Other 51Թ Forms
- Dz· noun
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of hob1
Origin of hob2
Idioms and Phrases
- play hob with, to do mischief or harm to:
The child played hob with my radio, and now it won't work at all.
- raise hob, to cause a destructive commotion; behave disruptively:
They raised such hob with their antagonistic questions that the meeting broke up.
Example Sentences
On a nearby cooking hob, Brogan is making a chicken curry.
Many of us can relate to oil and gas: Filling up the car, putting a pan on the hob.
Don't forget fruit and vegetables - the latter can be cooked with a steamer on one hob, rather than using different ones.
Her two gas hobs and one electric ring sit idle on the kitchen top, the room filling with smoke.
"When they put the island back in, they broke the hob so then they had to go get a new hob."
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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