Advertisement

Advertisement

Hyde

[ hahyd ]

noun

  1. Douglas, 1860–1949, Irish author and statesman: president of Ireland. 1938–45.


Hyde

1

/ haɪd /

noun

  1. a town in NW England, in Tameside unitary authority, Greater Manchester; textiles, footwear, engineering. Pop: 31 253 (2001)


Hyde

2

/ haɪd /

noun

  1. HydeDouglas18601949MIrishMISC: scholarWRITING: authorPOLITICS: head of state Douglas. 1860–1949, Irish scholar and author; first president of Eire (1938–45)
  2. Edward Hyde
    Edward Hyde HydeEdward See Clarendon 2

Discover More

Idioms and Phrases

see Jekyll and Hyde .

Discover More

Example Sentences

If you must use a generic CTA, it’s worth researching and testing whether it actually applies to the content you’re using it for, Hyde added.

Hyde recommends that marketers go beyond these bland CTAs to provide more value.

No—Manchin, as the perennial moderate polyp in the tubes of democracy, is implying that he may well use his position on the Senate Appropriations Committee to refuse to allow any budget to move to the floor of the Senate unless Hyde is preserved.

This is the Jackal and Hyde reputation the industry has suffered through ever since.

When the friends get together in person, for a beer or dinner, the deeper details “sneak in by accident,” Hyde said.

When it comes to Israel, President Obama has been Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Tichelman had such difficulties with Hyde staff that she was “outposted” to rough it on a school-owned island for a time.

The worst of the bunch was Mary Reilly, a gothic take on Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Much of this is already embodied in the Hyde Amendment, a rider annually attached to every appropriations bill since 1977.

“When I was about 4, we went back east for the summer, and they were at Hyde Park,” says Dern.

Lawrence Hyde, earl of Rochester, died; deservedly respected as an able statesman.

Not what you'd call a trench, of course, but compared to that wood—well, it was absolutely Hyde Park.

It looked on to Hyde Park, and a very white and dreary park it was on that particular day.

His splendid monument, with recumbent marble effigies of himself and his wife, occupies the east wall of the Hyde Chapel.

The next day, the 16th, they fought a duel with pistols in the ring in Hyde Park; they had no seconds and each fired twice.

Advertisement

Word of the Day

petrichor

[pet-ri-kawr]

Meaning and examples

Start each day with the Word of the Day in your inbox!

By clicking "Sign Up", you are accepting Dictionary.com Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policies.

Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


hydatidHyde, Mr.