harry

verb
/ˈhæɹi/UK/ˈhæɹi/US/ˈhɛɹi/

Etymology

From Middle English herien, harien, from Old English herġian, from Proto-West Germanic *harjōn, from Proto-Germanic *harjōną, from *harjaz (“army”), from Proto-Indo-European *koryos, from *ker- (“army”). Cognates See also Walloon hairyî, Old French hairier, harier; also Saterland Frisian ferheerje, German verheeren (“to harry, devastate”), Swedish härja (“ravage, harry”); also Old English here, West Frisian hear, Dutch heer, German Heer); also Middle Irish cuire (“army”), Lithuanian kãrias (“army; war”), Old Church Slavonic кара (kara, “strife”), Ancient Greek κοίρανος (koíranos, “chief, commander”), Old Persian [script needed] (kāra, “army”)). More at here (“army”). Compare typologically Latin populor.

  1. derived from *koryos
  2. inherited from *harjōną
  3. inherited from *harjōn
  4. inherited from herġian
  5. inherited from herien

Definitions

  1. To plunder, pillage, assault.

    • I repent me much , That so I harry'd him
  2. To make repeated attacks on an enemy.

  3. To strip, lay waste, ravage.

    • to harry this beautiful region
    • A red squirrel had harried the nest of a wood thrush.
  4. + 6 more definitions
    1. To harass, bother or distress with demands, threats, or criticism.

      • Chelsea also struggled to keep possession as QPR harried and chased at every opportunity, giving their opponents no time on the ball.
    2. A menial servant

      A menial servant; a sweeper.

    3. A male given name.

      • Yet weep that Harry's dead, and so will I; / But Harry lives that shall convert those tears / By number into hours of happiness.
      • 'I suppose you think I should call him Harry,' says Ruth. 'Harry? No. Ever since Harry bloody Potter that's been a nightmare.[…]
    4. A surname originating as a patronymic.

    5. A diminutive of the female given name Harriet.

    6. The drug heroin.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for harry. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA