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Verb (used with object)
to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
Fine Arts .
- to exhibit (a painting or group of paintings)
- The gallery hung his paintings in a small corner.
- to put the paintings of (an art exhibition) on the wall of a gallery
- They hung the show that morning.
to make (an idea, form, etc.) dependent on a situation, structure, concept, or the like, usually derived from another source
Verb (used without object)
Verb phrases
hang around or about, Informal .
- to spend time in a certain place or in certain company
- He hangs around with an older crowd.
- to linger about; loiter
- They had stopped working and were just hanging around to talk.
hang back,
- to be reluctant to proceed or move forward
- The older pupils went straight to the podium, but the younger ones hung back out of shyness.
- to refrain from taking action; hesitate
- A forward pass would have been the best call, but the quarterback hung back because his last pass had been intercepted.
hang on,
- to hold fast; cling to.
- to continue with effort; persevere
- If you can hang on for a month longer, you will be eligible for the bonus.
- to be sustained to the point of danger, tedium, etc.
- coughs that hang on for months.
- to keep a telephone line open
- Hang on, I'll see if she's here.
- to wait briefly; keep calm.
hang out,
- to lean or be suspended through an opening.
- Informal . to frequent a particular place, esp. in idling away one's free time
- to hang out in a bar.
- Informal . to loiter in public places
- nothing to do on Saturday night but hang out.
- Informal . to consort or appear in public with
- Who's she been hanging out with?
- Slang . to calm down
- Hang out, Mom, I'm OK.
- to wait, esp. briefly
- Hang out a minute while I get my backpack.
- to suspend in open view; display
- to hang out the flag.
hang over,
- to remain to be settled; be postponed
- They will probably let the final decision hang over until next year.
- to be imminent or foreboding; threaten
- Economic ruin hangs over the town.
hang up,
- to suspend by placing on a hook, peg, or hanger.
- to cause or encounter delay; suspend or slow the progress of
- The accident hung up the traffic for several hours.
- to break a telephone connection by replacing the receiver on the hook
- She received an anonymous call, but the party hung up when she threatened to call the police.
- to cause a hang-up or hang-ups in
- The experience hung her up for years.
Idioms
hang five
- to ride a surfboard with the weight of the body forward and the toes of the forward foot curled over the front edge of the surfboard.
hang one on
- Slang .
- to hit
- He hung one on the bully and knocked him down.
- to become extremely drunk
- Every payday he hangs one on.
hang ten
- to ride a surfboard with the weight of the body as far forward as possible and the toes of both feet curled over the front edge of the surfboard.
hang together
- to be loyal to one another; remain united
- We must indeed all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately.
- to cohere
- This pancake batter doesn't hang together.
- to be logical or consistent
- His version of the story does not hang together.
tác giả
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