¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hatsful
1. hatful [n] - See also: hatful
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hatsful
Literary usage of Hatsful
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1893)
"When we could get at it we drank it by hatsful, and filled ourselves up with mud.
We had no food with us, and could get none till wo reached the village of ..."
2. The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864: A Monograph by Jacob Dolson Cox (1897)
"The same officer, with others, carried hatsful of the cartridges along the line.
What was happening at this point was going on everywhere; the enthusiasm ..."
3. The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864: A Monograph by Jacob Dolson Cox (1897)
"The same officer, with others, carried hatsful of the cartridges along the line.
What was happening at this point was going on everywhere; the enthusiasm ..."
4. European Breezes by Marie J. Davis Pitman (1882)
"... a mound about seventy feet high, built by the burghers with hatsful of earth
in their joy over the expulsion of the Turks; ..."
5. Open Trails by Emily Ferguson Murphy (1912)
"There are hatsful of mushrooms hereabout, and I gather them to bring home.
They are crypto- gamic plants. ..."
6. The Sea-fisherman: Comprising the Chief Methods of Hook and Line Fishing in by James C. Wilcocks (1884)
"... of pulverised catechu and boil it until thoroughly dissolved in eighteen
gallons of water, adding thereto, if procurable, about two hatsful of young ..."