HARIOLATION
Har`i*o*la"tion, n. Etym: [See Ariolation.]
Defn: Prognostication; soothsaying. [Obs.] Cockeram.
HARISH
Har"ish, a.
Defn: Like a hare. [R.] Huloet.
HARK
Hark, v. i. Etym: [OE. herken. See Hearken.]
Defn: To listen; to hearken. [Now rare, except in the imperative form used as an interjection, Hark! listen.] Hudibras. Hark away! Hark back! Hark forward! (Sporting), cries used to incite and guide hounds in hunting. — To hark back, to go back for a fresh start, as when one has wandered from his direct course, or made a digression. He must have overshot the mark, and must hark back. Haggard. He harked back to the subject. W. E. Norris.
HARKEN
Hark"en, v. t. & i.
Defn: To hearken. Tennyson.
HARL Harl, n. Etym: [Cf. OHG. harluf noose, rope; E. hards refuse of flax.]
1. A filamentous substance; especially, the filaments of flax or hemp.