verb, heaved or (especially Nautical
) hove; heav⋅ing; noun | 1. | to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax. |
| 2. | to throw, esp. to lift and throw with effort, force, or violence: to heave an anchor overboard; to heave a stone through a window. |
| 3. | Nautical.
|
| 4. | to utter laboriously or painfully: to heave a sigh. |
| 5. | to cause to rise and fall with or as with a swelling motion: to heave one's chest. |
| 6. | to vomit; throw up: He heaved his breakfast before noon. |
| 7. | to haul or pull on (a rope, cable, line, etc.), as with the hands or a capstan: Heave the anchor cable! |
| 8. | to rise and fall in rhythmically alternate movements: The ship heaved and rolled in the swelling sea. |
| 9. | to breathe with effort; pant: He sat there heaving and puffing from the effort. |
| 10. | to vomit; retch. |
| 11. | to rise as if thrust up, as a hill; swell or bulge: The ground heaved and small fissures appeared for miles around. |
| 12. | to pull or haul on a rope, cable, etc. |
| 13. | to push, as on a capstan bar. |
| 14. | Nautical.
|
| 15. | an act or effort of heaving. |
| 16. | a throw, toss, or cast. |
| 17. | Geology. the horizontal component of the apparent displacement resulting from a fault, measured in a vertical plane perpendicular to the strike. |
| 18. | the rise and fall of the waves or swell of a sea. |
| 19. | heaves, (used with a singular verb ) Also called broken wind. Veterinary Pathology. a disease of horses, similar to asthma in human beings, characterized by difficult breathing. |
| 20. | heave down, Nautical. to careen (a vessel). |
| 21. | heave out, Nautical.
|
| 22. | heave to,
|
| 23. | heave ho (an exclamation used by sailors, as when heaving the anchor up.) |
| 24. | heave in sight, to rise to view, as from below the horizon: The ship hove in sight as dawn began to break. |
| 25. | heave the lead. lead 2 (def. 16). |

heave (hēv) v. heaved, heav·ing, heaves v. tr.
heave to Nautical
Idiom(s): heave into sight/viewTo rise or seem to rise over the horizon into view, as a ship. [Middle English heven, from Old English hebban; see kap- in Indo-European roots.] heav'er n. |
Hove
town, unitary authority of Brighton and Hove, historic county of Sussex, England, on the English Channel, adjoining Brighton to the east and Portslade to the west. Hove, which grew with Brighton as a seaside resort and residential town in the 19th century, has excellent road and rail connections with London to the north. Pop. (2001) 72,335.
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