Hole in a sentence as a noun

But we're really going down a rabbit hole here.

I believe the hole in the ground it left was nearly 2 feet deep.

Let me try and give you an idea of how deep the rabbit hole can go.- Okay, you want to detect bots.

Maybe Jeff is too far down the rabbit hole to realise this, but most people don't know what programming even looks like.

This hole in the market led to lots of drone-farming, and subsequently the price started to drop.

That's the golden mosquito, and a whole tribe of mosquito farmers has popped up in pursuit of their payoff.

And Microsoft has been gradually digging itself out of a hole in that respect for several years.

Enjoy sleeping in the bed you made, and here's hoping you will be permanently cured of f##king with us in the future, a##hole.

Hole in a sentence as a verb

It looks like a security hole, but NewsBlur actually just proxies the site and displays it back to the user.

Surprise, search is complex, context dependent, and not all apps can pigeon-hole it into your paradigm.

Apple has repeatedly not bowed to companies desires for owning contact information and I expect they will fix this contact hole in the near future.

The ground conditions in Seattle require that the machine be able to control the rate of excavation at all times such that a large sink hole does not form due to uncontrolled loss of ground.

The word that, should your colleague choose to pursue it, will lead him down the same rabbit hole to a universe filled with infinite combinations of infinite possibilities to produce a form of hyper-efficiency previously attainable only in his wildest of dreams.

However, simply because a couple mosquitoes have succeeded at killing a human does not, I repeat does not, indicate that the entire world of disease revolves around mosquitoes, nor that a forum discussing mosquitoes is representative of epidemiology as a whole.

This is the sort of person that I want to be engaged with:* highly opinionated* driven by personal interest* not afraid to go down the worm hole and come up with little public recognition and enormous personal gainThis is the sort of project that makes me grin:* highly engrossing project page* mysterious motivations* unknown implications* legally ambiguousI love this ****.

But sometimes one is dominant, and if the gray beast gets its teeth all the way into you, it takes away not just positive feelings but everything until you're just a walking shell so empty you can't even fully comprehend what you've lost.> The converse, when the black beast has you, can be much like you describe - you can still feel a kind of dreadful, frenzied joy in short moments as you cling desperately to the edge of the sucking dark hole in yourself, trying to ignore the beast's whispers that any pleasure is a lie that will just make the coming pain more stark and inescapable and utterly deserved.> They're liars, but they're good at it.

Hole definitions

noun

an opening into or through something

noun

an opening deliberately made in or through something

noun

one playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course; "he played 18 holes"

noun

an unoccupied space

noun

a depression hollowed out of solid matter

See also: hollow

noun

a fault; "he shot holes in my argument"

noun

informal terms for a difficult situation; "he got into a terrible fix"; "he made a muddle of his marriage"

See also: mess muddle pickle

noun

informal terms for the mouth

See also: trap cakehole

verb

hit the ball into the hole

verb

make holes in