Dictionary
Thesaurus
Encyclopedia
Translator
Web

in the hay

 - 2 dictionary results

hay

[hey]
–noun
1. grass, clover, alfalfa, etc., cut and dried for use as forage.
2. grass mowed or intended for mowing.
3. Slang.
a. a small sum of money: Twenty dollars an hour for doing very little certainly ain't hay.
b. money: A thousand dollars for a day's work is a lot of hay!
4. Slang. marijuana.
–verb (used with object)
5. to convert (plant material) into hay.
6. to furnish (horses, cows, etc.) with hay.
–verb (used without object)
7. to cut grass, clover, or the like, and store for use as forage.
8. a roll in the hay, Slang. sexual intercourse.
9. hit the hay, Informal. to go to bed: It got to be past midnight before anyone thought of hitting the hay.
10. in the hay, in bed; retired, esp. for the night: By ten o'clock he's in the hay.
11. make hay of, to scatter in disorder; render ineffectual: The destruction of the manuscript made hay of two years of painstaking labor.
12. make hay while the sun shines, to seize an opportunity when it presents itself: If you want to be a millionaire, you have to make hay while the sun shines. Also, make hay.

Origin:
bef. 900; ME; OE hēg; c. G Heu, ON hey, Goth hawi. See hew


hayey, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To in the hay
Word Origin & History

hay 
"grass mown," O.E. heg (Anglian), hieg, hig (W.Saxon) "grass cut or mown for fodder," from P.Gmc. *khaujan (cf. O.N. hey, O.Fris. ha, M.Du. hoy, Ger. Heu, Goth. hawi "hay"), lit. "that which is cut," or "that which can be mowed," from PIE *kau- "to hew, strike" (cf. O.E. heawan "to cut"). Hay-fever is from 1829; earlier it was called summer catarrh. Hayseed is from 1577 in the literal sense of "grass seed shaken out of hay;" in U.S. slang sense of "comical rustic" it dates from 1851. Haymaker in the sense of "very strong blow with the fist" is from 1912, probably in imitation of the wide swinging stroke of a scythe. Slang phrase hit the hay (pre-1880) was originally "to sleep in a barn;" hay in the general fig. sense of "bedding" (e.g. roll in the hay) is from 1903.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
Cite This Source
Search another word or see in the hay on Thesaurus | Reference
FacebookTwitterFollow us: