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hatched

[ UK /hˈæt‍ʃt/ ]
[ US /ˈhætʃt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. emerged from an egg
  2. shaded by means of fine parallel or crossed lines

How To Use hatched In A Sentence

  • The only recent changes have been trees blowing down and the repair of thatched roofs. Times, Sunday Times
  • All birds were hatched in incubators and kept in brooders until approximately 7 weeks of age, at which time they were moved to 5 x 7 x 4 m outdoor flight pens.
  • They have innumerable beautiful, barefoot children, live in low-slung, thatched, whitewashed cottages, and their climate is often cool, damp and misty.
  • The houfes of the town of Puna are built on pofts ten or twelve feet high, into which they go up by ladders, and are thatched with palmeto-leaves: the like contriv - ance I have feen among the Malayans in the Eaft Indies. A new collection of voyages, discoveries and travels : containing whatever is worthy of notice, in Europe, Asia, Africa and America
  • This kind of apsidal (or elsewhere even oval structures) houses ideal for thatched roofs were especially quite common during the Geometric Period (e.g. in the oldest Greek colonies at Old-Smyrna, Miletos, Ephesos; in many sanctuaries or houses on the Greek mainland, such as at Eretria, Perachora, etc). Interactive Dig Sagalassos - Tepe Duzen Report 2
  • The fellas who have hatched the plan are very proud and excited. The Sun
  • You stay in simple but comfortable thatched wooden houses, built on stilts. Times, Sunday Times
  • The house has a sloping/flat/tiled/thatched/etc. roof.
  • A cockatrice is a Dragon with a Crown on his head, and hatched by a Viper on a Cock's Egg. The Viper was the Symbol of Annotations
  • The court heard how she and her lover hatched a plot to kill her husband.
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