Part 404 (2/2)

V. ~Hat~.

_Sir Tristrem._

HAUCH, _s._ The forcible reiterated respiration of one who exerts all his strength in giving a stroke, S. _hech_.

Germ. _hauch_, halitus.

_Douglas._

HAUCHS _of a sock_, the three points into which the upper part of a ploughshare is divided, and by which it clasps in the wood, Ang.

Isl. _haeck_, Dan. _hage_, uncus.

HAUGH, HAWCH, HAUCH, HALCHE, _s._ Low-lying flat ground, properly on the border of a river, and such as is sometimes overflowed, S.

_Barbour._

Gael. _augh_, id. Isl. _hage_, a place for pasture.

_To_ HAVE, _v. a._

1. To carry.

_Acts Ja. I._

2. To behave.

_To_ HAVER, _v. n._ To talk foolishly, S. p.r.o.n. _haiver_.

_Ramsay._

Isl. _gifr-a_, loquitor, _hefer_, garrulus.

~Havers~, ~Haivers~, _s._ Foolish or incoherent talk, S.

_J. Nicol._

~Haveril~, _s._ One who habitually talks in a foolish manner, S.

<script>