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Hang up   /hæŋ əp/   Listen
Hang up

verb
1.
Put a telephone receiver back in its cradle.
2.
Cause to be hanging or suspended.  Synonym: hang.
3.
Interrupt a telephone conversation.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Hang up" Quotes from Famous Books



... "Hang up your fetishes again, you can do without them when hunting, and when you come back you ...
— The Two Supercargoes - Adventures in Savage Africa • W.H.G. Kingston

... possessed to a marked degree and which I always envied him, a thing small in itself, yet which enabled him to accomplish what he did in literature, and that was the ability to lay aside the business or cares of life, as one would hang up one's hat, absolutely and completely, and turn to his writing. The world will think of him as a poet naturalist, as a gentle sage and philosopher, when he was in truth a literary craftsman, and one who could never give but a portion of his time and effort to his ...
— My Boyhood • John Burroughs

... abandoning all hopes of ever going to church, when a Thames fisherman, of the name of Freeman, who lived at Greenwich, and with whom I was acquainted—for I used to assist him on the Saturday night to moor his coble off the landing-place, and hang up his nets to dry—called out to me to come and help him. I did so; we furled the sails, hauled on board his little boat for keeping the fish alive, hoisted the nets up to the mast, and made all secure; and I was thinking to myself that he would go to church to-morrow, and ...
— Poor Jack • Frederick Marryat

... to get my things off and hang up the cradle there, but it was too much for me, like, and I had ...
— Growth of the Soil • Knut Hamsun

... particular quality. Its general brightness was composed, doubtless, of many elements, but what shone out of it as if the whole place and time had been a great picture, from the hand of genius, presented to him as a prime ornament for his collection and all varnished and framed to hang up—what marked it especially for the highest appreciation was his extraordinarily unchallenged, his absolutely appointed and enhanced possession of it. Poor Fanny Assingham's challenge amounted to nothing: one of the ...
— The Golden Bowl • Henry James


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