Hunt in a sentence as a noun

Don't make me hunt across sites for it.

Principled pursuit of the right assignments is thus a bit of a stag hunt.

The witch hunt tweets that were coming out of him without getting the facts straight are downright disheartening.

" The author of the site seems to have gone through a lot of trouble to hunt down the original author of the quote.

"an act of terrorism" == "an act of the *****"The war on terrorism is our witch-hunt.

Were I watching a local hunt for this elephant to feed their family I would feel that the death was justified.

OpenBSD fixes the actual current problem child, Linux Foundation is on the hunt for the next problem child

Most of us disregard the fact that wealth is not remotely correlated with happiness and still hunt for the big payday.

Everybody was suspect until they were 'cleared' - the very definition of a witch hunt.

Hunt in a sentence as a verb

Where you would hunt for someone's private SVN repo on their personal site and email them patches, only to hope that something comes of your effort?

I can already see how a case will be put together next week using the reddit witch hunt threads as a reason why the internet needs censorship.

The social fallout from uttering these unpopular ideas will earn you only contempt, unless you want to be on the wrong end of a twitter witch hunt.

Like typography, it's hard because it's an arduous hunt for the aesthetics hidden behind information.

Witch hunts are McCarthy-esque persecutions of people for something that isn't actually wrong or illegal.

I see this from the opposite viewpoint, that PadMapper is operating as a search engine designed to help you find the right Craigslist posts for your apartment hunt.

A simple way to illustrate this is that if you have a screenshot of your application being used to play Madonna tracks, you are obligated to hunt down those tracks and remove them yourself.

" This could have been an opportunity to attempt bring someone, a powerful CEO, to the side of being informed and support gay rights but instead it was a witch hunt and an embarrassment.

The computer was essentially conducting a perpetual internal mole-hunt of the cartel's organizational chart.

Hunt definitions

noun

Englishman and Pre-Raphaelite painter (1827-1910)

See also: Hunt

noun

United States architect (1827-1895)

See also: Hunt

noun

British writer who defended the Romanticism of Keats and Shelley (1784-1859)

See also: Hunt

noun

an association of huntsmen who hunt for sport

noun

an instance of searching for something; "the hunt for submarines"

noun

the activity of looking thoroughly in order to find something or someone

See also: search hunting

noun

the work of finding and killing or capturing animals for food or pelts

See also: hunting

noun

the pursuit and killing or capture of wild animals regarded as a sport

See also: hunting

verb

pursue for food or sport (as of wild animals); "Goering often hunted wild boars in Poland"; "The dogs are running deer"; "The Duke hunted in these woods"

verb

pursue or chase relentlessly; "The hunters traced the deer into the woods"; "the detectives hounded the suspect until they found him"

See also: hound trace

verb

chase away, with as with force; "They hunted the unwanted immigrants out of the neighborhood"

verb

yaw back and forth about a flight path; "the plane's nose yawed"

verb

oscillate about a desired speed, position, or state to an undesirable extent; "The oscillator hunts about the correct frequency"

verb

seek, search for; "She hunted for her reading glasses but was unable to locate them"

verb

search (an area) for prey; "The King used to hunt these forests"