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Sentences with hitch

hitch
H h
  • After some technical hitches the show finally got under way.
  • There was no garage in sight, so I hitched a lift into town. [VERB noun]
  • Now, instead of driving their vehicles everywhere that they need to go, they are opting to hitch a ride with friends, co-workers or relatives.
  • The hitch -kick style of long jumping is one of the most aesthetically pleasing movements you could imagine.
  • Last night we hitched the horse to the cart and moved here. [V n + onto/to]
  • To hitch along
  • Some people think that tow hitch receivers are there to receive.
  • How often do we see hitch hikers on our roads nowadays?
  • The thread was hitched on the reel
  • A hitch in the proceedings
  • He gave it a hitch and it came loose
  • To walk with a hitch
  • hitch your chair up to the table
  • To hitch a wagon to a tractor
  • A trailer hitch on the car's bumper
  • Steve hitched the horse to one of the posts.
  • To hitch up one's trousers.
  • They got hitched in '79.
  • He hitched his jeans on a nail and tore them.
  • The old buggy hitched along.
  • His truck sported a heavy-duty hitch for his boat.
  • The banquet went off without a hitch. ("the banquet went smoothly. ")
  • The deal sounds too good to be true. What's the hitch?
  • She served two hitches in Vietnam. U. S. TROOPS FACE LONGER ARMY HITCH ; SOLDIERS BOUND FOR IRAQ, . . . WILL BE RETAINEDStephen J. Hedges & Mike Dorning, Chicago Tribune; Orlando Sentinel; Jun 3, 2004; pg. A. 1;
  • She hitched her jeans up and then tightened her belt.
  • He hitched the bedroll to his backpack and went camping.
  • To hitch a ride
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