What is hole?

  • (noun): A fault.
    Example: "He shot holes in my argument"
    See also — Additional definitions below

Hole

Hole or holes may also refer to:

Read more about Hole.

Some articles on hole:

Resplendent Quetzal - Behavior - Breeding
... lay two pale blue eggs in a nest placed in a hole which they carve in a rotten tree ... feathers folded forwards over the back and out of the hole, where they tend to look like a bunch of fern growing out of the hole ...
Hole, Norway - Twin Towns — Sister Cities
... cities in Norway The following cities are twinned with Hole Faaborg-Midtfyn, Denmark Hólmavík, Iceland Kustavi, Finland Tanum, Sweden ...
Plastic Mulch - Planting
... drum presses a spike into the plastic a hole is punched a water flows into the punched hole ... A rider on the transplanter can then place a plant in the hole ...
P-type Semiconductor
... number of free charge carriers (in this case positive holes) ... material and the vacancy left behind by the electron is known as a hole ... purpose of p-type doping is to create an abundance of holes ...
Darning Cloth
... the thread in the fabric on the edge of the hole and carrying it across the gap ... If enough threads are criss-crossed over the hole, the hole will eventually be covered with a mass of thread ... Often the hole is cut into a square or darn blends into the fabric ...

More definitions of "hole":

  • (noun): An opening deliberately made in or through something.
  • (verb): Hit the ball into the hole.
    Synonyms: hole out
  • (noun): An unoccupied space.
  • (verb): Make holes in.
  • (noun): One playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course.
    Synonyms: golf hole
  • (noun): An opening into or through something.
  • (noun): A depression hollowed out of solid matter.
    Synonyms: hollow

Famous quotes containing the word hole:

    The absence on the panel of anyone who could become pregnant accidentally or discover her salary was five thousand dollars a year less than that of her male counterpart meant there was a hole in the consciousness of the committee that empathy, however welcome, could not entirely fill.
    Anna Quindlen (b. 1953)

    The cosmos is about the smallest hole that a man can hide his head in.
    Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936)

    Dreams have a poetic integrity and truth. This limbo and dust- hole of thought is presided over by a certain reason, too. Their extravagance from nature is yet within a higher nature.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)