Meaning Hole
What does Hole mean? Here you find 70 meanings of the word Hole. You can also add a definition of Hole yourself

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Hole


A hole in the macula, the tiny oval area made up of millions of nerve cells located at the center of the retina responsible for sharp, central vision. The eye contains a jelly-like substance called the vitreous. Shrinking of the vitreous usually causes the hole. As a person ages, the vitreous becomes thicker and stringier and begins to pull away fr [..]
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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Hole


Old English hol (adj.) "hollow, concave;" as a noun, "hollow place; cave; orifice; perforation," from Proto-Germanic *hul- (source also of Old Saxon, Old Frisian, Old High German h [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Hole


"to make a hole," Old English holian "to hollow out, scoop out," from source of hole (n.). Related: Holed; holing. To hole up "seek a temporary shelter or hiding place" i [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Hole


spot in a river where the water is still and deep.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Hole


1. 4¼ inch diameter hole in the ground into which the ball is to be played  2. the entire length of the playing area and immediate vicinity from the teeing ground to the putting green (all inclusive) [..]
Source: pgaprofessional.com

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Hole


The 4 1/4 inch hole where the balls have to be put into.
Source: thaigerlinegolf.com (offline)

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Hole


Either the hole in the ground on the green that you aim to place the ball; or the name for each of the 18 playing areas that make up a (standard) golf course. The former is usually 4 ¼ inches in diame [..]
Source: golfonline.co.uk

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Hole


Can refer to each section of a golf course from the tee to the green as well as the actual hole or cup in the ground where the golfer is trying to hit the ball into. There are typically 18 holes on a [..]
Source: ducksters.com

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Hole


1. 4¼ inch diameter hole in the ground into which the ball is to be played 2. the entire length of the playing area and immediate vicinity from the teeing ground to the putting green (all inclusive) 3 [..]
Source: murdofrazer.com

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The hole in golf is basically the object of the game. In fact, it has three different meanings. First, it is the central point at the putting green, golfers can recognize it all over the golf course by the flagstick and if the pin is removed, it is the actual hole in the putting green. That is the general goal and fixed point of the golf player. Th [..]
Source: thematchplayer.com (offline)

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Hole


The target in disc golf, usually objects or baskets. The term "hole" encompasses the entire play area: tee, fairway, green, and target.  For instance, Hole #1 can refer to the entire fairway and path traveled on the first play area or can refer specifically to basket #1 on the first green. Holing out
Source: discgolfstation.com (offline)

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Hole


- 1. A hole consists of the play area; a tee off area or pad, a fairway, and target.
Source: imagineauburn.com

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Hole


- 2. In disc golf there is no 'hole,' per se'; the correct term is 'target.'
Source: imagineauburn.com

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Hole


a hole in the ground which is called the cup. 4.25 inches in diameter.
Source: translationdirectory.com

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Hole


A part of the golf course that runs from the tee down the fairway and into the hole. Most golf courses have 18 holes, though some have less. A hole is commonly referred to by its number, for example, the 13th hole or the 16th hole. The average length of a hole is 450 yards, and most of that is taken up by the fairway.
Source: ebay.com (offline)

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Hole


an opening into or through something hit the ball into the hole make holes in one playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course; "he played 18 holes" an unoccupied spac [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Hole


In very easy terms, hole is where the golfers aim to putt the golf ball. This is a spot on the green where a flagstick can be seen and the turf has been chipped off to prepare that hole or cup.
Source: buzzle.com (offline)

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Hole


Where you want your golf ball to end up eventually. A small cylinder cut into the ground and measuring 41/4 inches in diameter and at least 4 inches deep, located on the green of a golf course.
Source: leskincaid.com (offline)

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Hole


The hole on the green that the golfer attempts to hit their golf ball into, where the flagstick stands.
Source: strokeaverage.com

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Hole


the end destination for the golf ball, located on the green, containing the cup.
Source: gamerisms.com

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Hole


(aka: "cup") the hole cut in each green measuring 4 1/4 inches in diameter in which the flagstick is placed. Also a term used to describe a particular set of tees, fairway, hazards a [..]
Source: thegolfexpert.com

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Hole


The hole is from the tee to the green where there is the hole cut in the green. The hole is rated as the number of shots to be taken in regulation e.g. par 3 or par 5. The hole cut in the green is a s [..]
Source: womeningolf.com.au

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Hole


The Footgolf course consists of 9-18 holes. The hole found at the very end of the section has a diameter of 53 cm and depth of 40 cm.
Source: footgolf-dublin.ie

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Hole


A term that is both a verb and a noun. The hole is the cup
Source: playthinkinggolf.com (offline)

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Hole


The target that must be reached in order to complete that segment of the course. The term "hole" also refers to the numbered segments of the course that are separate units for scoring.
Source: discnation.com

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Hole


1. To hit the ball into the hole, as in "I holed my putt for a five."
Source: badgolfer.com

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Hole


A 4 1/4" (108 mm) round receptacle in the green - at least 4" (100 mm) deep. Also refers to one of the nine or eighteen areas between the tee and the green.
Source: 100golfschools.com

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Hole


Same as cup above.
Source: amgolfscores.com (offline)

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Hole


First, the hole in the putting-green into which the ball is played; second, the whole space between any teeing-ground and the actual hole.
Source: chestofbooks.com

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Hole


an opening in or through something
Source: eenglish.in

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Hole


is a). a hollow dug in the green where ball is rolled into; 2). the whole playing surface from the tee to the green.
Source: dongolf.ru

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Hole


General term for the whole region between the tee and green, but also the specific target in the ground of a standard 41/4in (108 mm) in diameter.
Source: mountjuliet.ie (offline)

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Hole


In security terminology, a hole refers to a software or operating system vulnerability that could be exploited to compromise the overall security of the computer system or network on which the hole re [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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Hole


lokh
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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Hole


A void or gap two inches (5.1 centimeters) or more in the least dimension in a floor, roof, or other walking/working surface.
Source: safety.uchicago.edu

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Hole


(n) an opening into or through something(n) an opening deliberately made in or through something(n) one playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course(n) an unoccupied space(n) a depression hollo [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Hole


an electron that isn't there! Imagine a tiny bubble of nothing, not even air, in a great sea of water. That would be a hole in the water. If some of the surrounding water fills the hole, that creates a new hole, so even though it is really the water that moves, you can think of the hole moving through the water. In some kinds of semiconductor [..]
Source: physics.usyd.edu.au (offline)

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Hole


Pick a hole in his coat. To find out some cause of blame. The allusion is to the Roman custom of dressing criminals in rags (Livy, ii. 61): Hence, a holey coat is a synonym for guilt.
Source: bartleby.com

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Hole


(b. December 5th, 1819). “A Little Tour in Ireland” (1859), “A Book about Roses” (1869); “Six of Spades” (1872); “Hints to Preachers& [..]
Source: bartleby.com

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Hole


A small area of considerably greater depths than those in the vicinity; of less area than a deep.
Source: digimap.edina.ac.uk

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Hole


(slang) Passing track enabling one train to pass another.
Source: rsmck.com

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Hole


This is the minimum diameter of the hole in which spring can work Hot-wound springs
Source: vanel.com (offline)

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Hole


a fictitious mobile particle that behaves as though it is a positively charged particle; holes are produced in the valence band when electrons from the valence band are promoted to the conduction band [..]
Source: matse1.matse.illinois.edu

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Hole


A large area over a region of the Earth in the Ozone Layer where Ozone destruction has overtaken Ozone production.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Hole


Perforations through the whole thickness of the Retina including the macula as the result of Inflammation, Trauma, degeneration, etc. The concept includes Retinal breaks, Tears, Dialyses, and holes.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Hole


adj.(2) "whole, entire; healthy, unhurt," s.v. whole a., sb., adv. (int.) OED. KEY: hole@adj2
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


adj2 48 hol 4 hole 3 hool 37 hoole 4
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


adv. "wholly, completely," s.v. whole a., sb., adv. (int.) OED. KEY: hole@adv
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


adv 10 hol 1 hool 9
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


n.(2) "hole, perforation," s.v. hole sb. OED. KEY: hole@n2
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


n2 24 hole 13 holes 7 hool 3 hoole 1
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


n.(3) "whole, entirety," s.v. whole a., sb., adv. (int.) OED. KEY: hole@n3
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


n3 1 hool 1
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Hole


valley
Source: user.xmission.com

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Hole


A 4 inch round receptacle on the green that you try to get your ball into.
Source: waggle.com

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Hole


A defensive area in front of the goal. You will hear "Get back in the hole!".
Source: beginnerlacrosse.com (offline)

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Hole


The space opened by blockers for a ball carrier.
Source: nfl-360.com (offline)

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Hole


1. The Chess Glossary Team were about to write something rude, when management wisely took over the entry, shrewdly distracting the low-rent dole queue professionals with the latest box set of Battlestar Gallactica and a packet of Monster Munch. 2. A square unguarded by Pawns, that cannot be defended, making it an ideal spot for any of your other p [..]
Source: chess-game-strategies.com (offline)

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Hole


Card - any dealt card, which is played face-down on the table. The definition most often refers to the dealer's single, face-down card.
Source: sportbet.com (offline)

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Hole


A square that is undefendable by pawns. Such a square serves as an excellent home for enemy pieces, especially the knight.
Source: arkangles.com

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Hole


the cards that are dealt face-down to you in hold'em and stud.
Source: cardschat.com (offline)

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Hole


A reversal. This term is generally applied to reversals of less than river wide width. See Souse Hole.
Source: pinnacle-travel.org

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Hole


A gap left in the covalent bond when a valence electron gains sufficient energy to jump to the conduction band.
Source: wiki.analog.com

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Hole


a missing electron, which, due to the positive charge of the nucleus, leads to the atom / molecule having an overall positive charge
Source: oes-net.de (offline)

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Hole


an energy level that is not occupied by an electron in a solid
Source: go.hrw.com

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Hole


Where water flowing over a rock or other obstacle flows down, then back onto itself in an eruption of whitewater.
Source: highdesertriver.com (offline)

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Hole


In a crystal lattice, a point which has been vacated by an electron.
Source: elect.mrt.ac.lk (offline)

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Hole


A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; an opening in or through a solid body, a fabric, etc.; a perforation; a rent; a fissure. (There’s a hole in my shoe. xii.9: *: The priest took [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Hole


A municipality in Buskerud, Norway
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Hole


===Noun=== ====space in a solid that lacks material====




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