15 Verbs to Use for the Word hauls

Yesterday he got his first net haul from the bottom, with the assistance of Atkinson and Cherry-Garrard.

"They seemed to have an idea, thoughto account for the problem of the locked doorthat thieves might have got into the house with the object of making a haul in the bedrooms while every one's attention was engaged down below, have secreted themselves in the tower, been surprised by Henshaw, and, to save themselves, have taken the only effectual means of silencing him, poor fellow.

This day we only travelled eight miles down the Oakover, and encamped near a deep creek, in which was caught a good haul of fish.

"La haul parhna," to repeat or recite the "La haul," or more fully, "La haul wa la kuwwat illa b-Illahi;" meaning, "there is no power nor strength but in God."

"And I'm telling you that if it was up to me to make an arrest to-day I'd nab Mr. Gerald Lawrenceand haul in William Barker for good measure.

When it is found out we shall be in Richmond, and, if the provost folk get hold of me afore I've been home and planted my haul, then I'm a Yank.

By midnight, say, we get started an' haul up to Knowlsey top lock, which is a matter of three miles.

A burglar was one night engaged in the pleasing occupation of stowing a good haul of swag in his bag when he was startled by a touch on the shoulder, and, turning his head, he beheld a venerable, mild-eyed clergyman gazing sadly at him.

Off goes the coat of our enthusiast and in he plunges; he gripes a heavy dumb-bell and strains one shoulder, hauls at a weight-box and strains the other, vaults the bar and bruises his knee, swings in the rings once or twice till his hand slips and he falls to the floor.

Backward and forward they run and crawl, Houses and treasures they heap up high, Hither and thither their booty haul, ... Then suddenly drop in their tracks and die!

Then the bo'sun bade us haul in the rest of the rope, until we should come to the packet, and, in the meantime, he examined the line to see whether it had suffered harm through the mandibles of the crab; yet, beyond a little chafe, it was quite sound.

The bottom, just outside the reef, is covered with that mud, mixed with more lime-mud, which the surge wears off the reef; and if you have, as you should have, a dredge on board, and try a haul of that mud as you row home, you may find, but not always, animal forms rooted in it, which will delight the soul of a scientific man.

But 'twas only a company of fishers examining their haul of fishes, as we presently perceived.

If you have large islands in the enclosure you may expect a rich haul from your snails.

The tugs forming the first named group haul on an average 2,200 tons of cargo, contained in four wooden barges, at a speed of kilometers (2.8 miles) per hour, against a stream running at the rate of kilometers (4.05 miles) per hour, while the tugs Nos.

15 Verbs to Use for the Word  hauls