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[ US /ˈhɛɹ/ ]
[ UK /hˈe‍ə/ ]
NOUN
  1. flesh of any of various rabbits or hares (wild or domesticated) eaten as food
  2. swift timid long-eared mammal larger than a rabbit having a divided upper lip and long hind legs; young born furred and with open eyes
VERB
  1. run quickly, like a hare
    He hared down the hill

How To Use hare In A Sentence

  • Rows of brick garden apartments all backed onto a massive common garden: a shared backyard for children to play, dogs to gambol, and families to eat picnics together. Day of Honey
  • Mass culture is supposedly a leveler and globalizer - by definition, we all share mass cultural references.
  • Frankly I don't understand why most companies don't follow the same policy as franked income in the hands of shareholders is worth a lot more to them than huge piles of franking credits mouldering away in the company's balance sheet.
  • The exchange continued for a little over a year, until both men became absorbed in other projects, but while it lasted, Mr. Neumeyer says, "we were both sparked into spurts of vivifying and shared creativity. Gorey's Flights of Fancy
  • The space left by evaporation is called the ullage, while the liquid lost is sometimes called the ‘angels' share’ and is particularly financially significant in the production of older cognac and Armagnac.
  • During the take-over battle the stock quotations of both enterprises rose so that an investor would have to wait several hundred years to finance the purchase price of the shares from the present level of profits.
  • The cash raising was not unexpected and allows a few more shareholders on board. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though serfs were freed in 1864, they remained poor sharecroppers and staged a massive peasant uprising in 1907.
  • If you don't invest in these shares, you're saying no to a fortune.
  • The euphoria reached phenomenal levels when the kids got a chance to share the stage with their stars.
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