harken

verb
/ˈhɑːk(ə)n/UK/ˈhɑɹkən/US

Etymology

Borrowed from North German Harken.

  1. borrowed from Harken

Definitions

  1. Alternative spelling of hearken

    Alternative spelling of hearken: to hear, to listen, to have regard.

    • Ev'n from the depths of Hell the Damn'd advance, / Th' Infernal Manſions nodding ſeem to dance; / The gaping three-mouth'd Dog forgets to ſnarl, / The Furies harken, and their Snakes uncurl.
    • How, then, am I mad? Harken! and observe how healthily—how calmly I can tell you the whole story.
    • [T]he mother who had shaped him if any had toward the man he almost was, [...] whom he had revered and harkened to and loved and lost and grieved: [...]
  2. To hark back, to return or revert (to a subject, etc.), to allude to, to evoke, to long…

    To hark back, to return or revert (to a subject, etc.), to allude to, to evoke, to long or pine for (a past event or era).

    • Bell argued that the manual approach was "backwards," and harkened to a primitive age where humans used gesture and pantomime.
  3. A surname from German.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for harken. 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