MESS vs HOLE: NOUN
- A state of confusion and disorderliness
- A supply or provision of anything to be eaten at one meal; a quantity of food sufficient for one or more persons for a single occasion: as, a mess of peas for dinner; a mess of oats for a horse.
- In fishing, the amount or number of fish taken; the take or haul of fish.
- A number of persons who eat together at the same table; especially, a group of officers or men in the army or navy who regularly take their meals in company.
- A set of four; any group of four persons or things: originally as a convenient subdivision of a numerous company at dinner, a practice still maintained in the London inns of court.
- Soft semiliquid food
- An obsolete form of mace.
- Mass; church service.
- A quantity of food set on a table at one time; provision of food for a person or party for one meal; ; also, the food given to a beast at one time.
- A set of four; -- from the old practice of dividing companies into sets of four at dinner.
- A meal eaten by service personnel
- An obsolete form of mass
- (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent
- A situation of confusion, disorder, or embarrassment; a muddle: as, to get one's self into a mess.
- A disorderly mixture or jumble of things; a state of dirt and disorder: as, the house was in a mess.
- A cluttered, untidy, usually dirty place or condition.
- Something that is disorderly or dirty, as a accumulation or heap.
- A confused, troubling, or embarrassing condition or situation.
- The milk given by a cow at one milking.
- One that is in such a condition.
- An amount of food, as for a meal, course, or dish.
- A serving of soft, semiliquid food.
- A group of people, usually soldiers or sailors, who regularly eat meals together.
- Food or a meal served to such a group.
- A mess hall.
- Informal terms for a difficult situation
- A disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; hence, a situation resulting from blundering or from misunderstanding.
- A (large) military dining room where service personnel eat or relax
- A fault
- An awkward situation; a predicament.
- The small pit lined with a cup into which a golf ball must be hit.
- One of the divisions of a golf course, from tee to cup.
- A vacant position in an atom left by the absence of a valence electron, especially a position in a semiconductor that acts as a carrier of positive electric charge.
- A hollow place or cavity in a solid body; a perforation, orifice, aperture, pit, rent, or crevice.
- The excavated habitation of certain wild animals, as the fox, the badger, etc.; a burrow.
- Hence A narrow, dark, or obscure lodging or place; especially, an obscure lodging for one in hiding, or a secret room for a prohibited or disreputable business, as for counterfeiting, unlicensed printing, liquor-selling, etc.: as, a rum-hole.
- The hollow interior of a ship: now called, by corruption, the hold. See hold.
- An ugly, squalid, or depressing dwelling.
- A level grassy area surrounded by mountains: a word formerly much in use and still current in the northern parts of the Rocky Mountains.
- A puzzling situation; a scrape; a fix.
- Synonyms Opening, cave, cavity, excavation, hollow.
- Den, kennel, hovel.
- A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; an opening in or through a solid body, a fabric, etc.; a perforation; a rent; a fissure.
- An excavation in the ground, made by an animal to live in, or a natural cavity inhabited by an animal; hence, a low, narrow, or dark lodging or place; a mean habitation.
- A small cavity used in some games, usually one into which a marble or ball is to be played or driven; hence, a score made by playing a marble or ball into such a hole, as in golf.
- At Eton College, England, that part of the floor of the court between the step and the pepperbox.
- Clandestine, underhand.
- An indentation in the coast; a cove, or small harbor, as Holmes's Hole in Martha's Vineyard, and Wood's Hole on the coast opposite; a narrow passage or waterway between two islands, as Robinson's Hole, in the same region.
- An opening deliberately made in or through something
- One playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course
- An opening into or through something
- A depression hollowed out of solid matter
- An unoccupied space
- A deep or isolated place of confinement; a dungeon.
- Informal terms for a difficult situation
- Informal terms for the mouth
- A hollowed place in something solid; a cavity or pit.
- An opening or perforation.
- An opening in a defensive formation, such as the area of a baseball infield between two adjacent fielders.
- A fault or flaw.
- A deep place in a body of water.
- An animal's hollowed-out habitation, such as a burrow.
MESS vs HOLE: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Whole.
MESS vs HOLE: VERB
- Eat in a mess hall
- Make a mess of or create disorder in
- Make holes in
- Hit the ball into the hole
MESS vs HOLE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To take meals with a mess; to belong to a mess; to eat (with others).
- To take a meal in a military mess.
- To intrude; interfere.
- To make disorderly or dirty.
- To cause or make a mess.
- To make a hole in something.
- To put or propel into a hole.
- To put a hole in.
MESS vs HOLE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To supply with a mess.
- To make a mess{5} of; to disorder or muddle; to muss; to jumble; to disturb; to mess up.
- N/A
MESS vs HOLE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To share a mess; eat in company with others or as a member of a mess; take a meal with any other person: as, I will mess with you to-day.
- To supply with a mess: as, to mess cattle.
- To sort in messes for the table, as meat.
- To make a mess of; disorder, soil, or dirty.
- To muddle; throw into confusion: as, he messes the whole business.
- Mass. See by the mass, under mass.
- A meal eaten in a mess hall by service personnel
- Specifically, to retire into a den or burrow for the winter: said of a hibernating animal.
- In billiards, to win by pocketing. Some billiard games of mixed pockets and caroms require the final shot to be a carom; others insist upon a pocket.
- A simplified (and the earlier) spelling of whole.
- Hollow; deep; concave.
- Hollow; hungry.
- In coal-mining, to undercut the coal, or pick away the lower part of the seam, so that that which is above can be thrown down by means of wedges or by the use of powder.
- In mining: To connect two workings with each other.
- To drive into a hole.
- To cut, dig, or make a hole or holes in: as, to hole a post for the insertion of rails or bars; to hole a flute.
- To go into a hole, as an animal into its den or burrow.
- The former and more correct spelling of whole.
- (idiom) (in the hole) At a disadvantage.
- (idiom) (in the hole) Having a score below zero.
- (idiom) (in the hole) In debt.
MESS vs HOLE: RELATED WORDS
- Sight, Hatful, Whole lot, Tidy sum, Slew, Wad, Jam, Lot, Hole, Messiness, Heap, Pickle, Pile, Fix, Muddle
- Crater, Cavity, Sinkhole, Tee, Kettle of fish, Hole out, Muddle, Pickle, Fix, Hollow, Yap, Jam, Trap, Mess, Maw
MESS vs HOLE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Stack, Sight, Hatful, Whole lot, Tidy sum, Slew, Wad, Jam, Lot, Hole, Heap, Pickle, Pile, Fix, Muddle
- Gap, Trench, Crater, Cavity, Tee, Kettle of fish, Hole out, Muddle, Pickle, Fix, Hollow, Yap, Jam, Mess, Maw
MESS vs HOLE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Ask God to help you discern this mess.
- Why mess with the troubles of a Jew?
- My God, will you look at that mess?
- How did the USA get into this mess?
- You mess with one of us, you mess with all of us.
- An addition of Amazon Semis and their delivery vans is going to make more of a mess of an already mess.
- Each hall has a Mess Committee consisting of students and wardens who lay down appropriate rules and norms for running the mess.
- Feel as though God tries to bless me but I just mess up and mess up.
- He was number one guy will mess be mess!
- Boarders, except the mess committee members, mess secretary and mess manager, shall not usually enter the kitchen.
- Medicare donut hole is or what it means for your prescription drug coverage, check out this Medicare Donut Hole infographic.
- It is a double movement, where the hole functions also as a symbol of unattainable love, a hole in a heart.
- To install the box, push it into the hole in the wall, enlarging the hole with a utility knife if needed.
- Stick it into the touch hole and poke a hole in the charge so that some of the gunpowder is exposed.
- Black Hole, sees her create a micro black hole that sucks in all nearby players.
- Using your largest hole punch, punch a hole on one side of the diamond.
- All fuses must be burning inside the hole before the first hole detonates.
- It looks to have a brass fitting inside one hole that extends halfway down the hole.
- Whichever hole I play best is my favorite hole at the miniature golf course.
- Trunkline tubing is later connected hole to hole.
MESS vs HOLE: QUESTIONS
- Where did Beautiful Mess go on the Billboard charts?
- Did Margaret Thatcher say'socialists always make a mess?
- How does tokye cable management kit eliminate cord mess?
- Can you take a stainless steel mess kit backpacking?
- What happened to discord after the mess in Ponyville?
- How to contact Ramses trios Mess und Datentechnik GmbH?
- Why does the QWERTY keyboard mess around with punctuation?
- Would an unscripted Friends reunion be a diabolical mess?
- Can lung disease mess with your breathing patterns?
- Do debt consolidation services mess up your credit?
- What is bottom hole circulating temperature (bhct)?
- What breaks the particle-hole conjugation symmetry?
- What does the black hole look like in the movie Black Hole?
- Can a white hole form from a supermassive black hole?
- What happened to the black hole in Thordur's black hole?
- What's the deal with the black hole and white hole mods?
- Is there such thing as a white hole instead of a black hole?
- How many players have made a hole-in-one on the 16th hole?
- What is Stewart Cink's lowest 36-hole and 54-hole score?
- What size hole does the hole in one cover adjust to?