Acold vs Ahold - What's the difference?
acold | ahold |
(obsolete) Of a person, feeling cold.
* c 1603–1606 : Shakespeare, King Lear , IV-i
(obsolete, nautical) To bring a ship to lie as near to the windward as it can to get out to sea.
* 1611 , , by Shakespeare
A hold, grip, grasp.
As an adjective acold
is (obsolete) of a person, feeling cold.As an adverb ahold is
(obsolete|nautical) to bring a ship to lie as near to the windward as it can to get out to sea.As a noun ahold is
a hold, grip, grasp.acold
English
Adjective
(-)- Poor Tom's acold .
Anagrams
*ahold
English
Alternative forms
* a-hold (adverb)Adverb
(-)- Lay her ahold
Noun
(-)- {{quote-book
citation, genre= , publisher=Thomas Nelson Inc. , isbn=9781595552747 , page=121 , passage=GET AHOLD OF YOURSELF! }}