What is another word for hale?

Pronunciation: [hˈe͡ɪl] (IPA)

Hale refers to being in good health and physical condition. There are several synonyms for the word hale, including hearty, robust, sound, and healthy. Other similar words to hale include fit, strong, vigorous, and active. All of these words denote good health, strength, and vitality. Some other synonyms for hale include blooming, radiant, and flourishing. These words all express the idea of someone being in excellent health and physical shape. When looking for synonyms for hale, it is important to consider the context in which the word will be used and choose the word that conveys the intended meaning most accurately.

Synonyms for Hale:

What are the paraphrases for Hale?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
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What are the hypernyms for Hale?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for hale?

The word "hale" is often used to describe a person who is healthy and robust. However, there are several antonyms for this word, which describe the opposite condition. Some of the most common antonyms for "hale" are sickly, weak, frail, feeble, and infirm. A person who is sickly is often suffering from an illness or disease that weakens their body. A weak person lacks physical strength and stamina, while a frail person is delicate and easily broken. Feeble refers to a person who lacks vitality or energy, while infirm is used to describe someone who is chronically ill or weak. Knowing these antonyms for "hale" can help you to better describe a person's health and condition.

What are the antonyms for Hale?

Usage examples for Hale

Dick, so he felt sure, was out of doors-no doubt walking off, as the young and hale are able to do, his anger and his pain.
"Jane Oglander"
Marie Belloc Lowndes
A man in that condition does not take things to heart in the same way that we who are hale and strong do.
"Jane Oglander"
Marie Belloc Lowndes
Sir M. hale, in his "Discourse Touching the Poor," published in 1683, says the family of a working man, consisting of husband, wife, and four children, could not be supported in meat, drink, clothing, and house-rent on less than 10s.
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae

Famous quotes with Hale

  • Not until he stood at the altar did he achieve a sense of being hale and furnished. It was strange, he thought, that a man would find his surest current in the spot where he felt least worthy.
    Charles Tennyson Turner
  • In these years Mr. Blatchford gave invaluable help to Socialist propaganda. No man did more than he to make Socialism understood by the ordinary working man. His writings in them had nothing of economic abstruseness. He based his appeal on the principles of human justice. He preached Socialism as a system of industrial co-operation for the common good. His arguments and illustrations were drawn from facts and experiences within the knowledge of the common people. Socialism as he taught it was not a cold, materialistic theory, but the promise of a new life as full, sweet and noble as the world can give...Mr. Blatchford is still living, hale and hearty, his mental powers undiminished at the ripe age of eighty-three. I saw him recently, and we talked of those grand and inspiring times of forty years ago. Only the men who were in the Socialist movement in those days can know the great part Robert Blatchford took in making it popular, and of the personal devotion he inspired by his writings.
    Robert Blatchford
  • Shakespeare is not our poet, but the world's, Therefore on him no speech! and brief for thee, Browning! Since Chaucer was alive and hale, No man hath walked along our roads with step So active, so inquiring eye, or tongue So varied in discourse.
    Walter Savage Landor
  • Who could so watch, and not forget the rack Of wills worn thin and thought become too frail, Nor roll the centuries back — And feel the sinews of his soul grow hale, And know himself for Rome's inheritor?
    Vita Sackville-West
  • HENRY: Now it is necessary to court her, and win her, and put on this clean dressing gown, and cut my various nails, and drink something that will kill the millions of germs in my mouth, and say something flattering, and be witty and bonny, and hale and kinky, all just to ease this wrinkle in the groin. It seems a high price.
    Donald Barthelme

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