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  1. Dictionary
    hie
    /hʌɪ/

    verb

    • 1. go quickly: archaic "I hied down to New Orleans"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of HIE is to go quickly : hasten. How to use hie in a sentence. Hie Isn't a Word of the Past

  3. to go quickly or to hurry: hie me to I must hie me to the sales before all the bargains are gone. Synonyms. hasten formal. hotfoot it informal. race. rush. speed. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Moving quickly. agility. beetle. belt. bob up. bowl down/along something. cannonball. gallop. gun. leg. make good time idiom. make haste idiom

  4. Hie definition: to hasten; speed; go in haste.. See examples of HIE used in a sentence.

  5. To hie is to move in a hurried or hasty way. It's the kind of word you are more likely hear in a Shakespeare play, like when a character demands, " Hie thee hither!" The verb hie is extremely old fashioned, so you're much more likely to read it in a book than to hear someone say it.

  6. Define hie. hie synonyms, hie pronunciation, hie translation, English dictionary definition of hie. intr. & tr.v. hied , hie·ing or hy·ing , hies To go quickly; hasten. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

  7. “Hie” is an example of an uncommon verb, and it simply means to go quickly or do something with haste, aka speed. It’s not super common in the everyday modern conversations you’re probably used to having because it’s more along the lines of old English.

  8. Jun 17, 2024 · 1. to hasten; speed; go in haste. transitive verb. 2. to hasten (oneself) Hie yourself down to this once-in-a-lifetime sale!

  9. Definition of hie verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Origin of Hie. From Old English hīġian. Cognate with Dutch hijgen (“to pant”), German heichen (“to choke, gasp for breath”), Danish hige (“to aspire, long”). From Wiktionary. Middle English hien from Old English hīgian to strive, exert oneself.

  11. Jun 2, 2024 · Unlike most reflexive verbs, “hie” generally takes the simple object pronouns rather than the reflexive pronouns. Thus “we hied us” and “hie you,” rather than “we hied ourselves” and “hie yourself.”