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Dictionary
Hitch
noun
A sudden pull.
Exact(34)
Equipment is carried by camel and kids can also hitch a ride, which should keep cries of "I'm tired... ...... to a minimum.
In fact the first voyage went without a hitch.
It cites a study that estimates that such a shift would save $15 billion a year.The hitch is that utilities in America have provided smart meters for only 6% of their customers, according to the FERC.
To cut losses from outages, offshore operators are investing in helicopters to whizz engineers to stricken turbines when seas are too rough for boats.Another hitch is that much of the money lavished on building offshore wind farms leaves the country.
One of the largest movements of people ever in the world by train has been achieved, so far, without a major hitch.
Some, perhaps many, would hitch a free ride as ratings leaked.In any case, agencies can reasonably claim to be tackling their conflicts.
Similar(26)
One of the runners up to Peerby was Djump, a "social ridesharing" service that acts something like a hitch-hiking app.
The downside, as any hitch-hiker will tell you, is that you rarely end up precisely where you want to be.
He has done many good things to help people," she said, hitching up her dress emblazoned with the red and green of Nigeria's incumbent People's Democratic party.
Instead, I had spent a very pleasant morning back in Barcelona, using the latest generation of hitching apps and websites to set up an itinerary of interconnecting rides.
Not one moment of this long day on the road had been spent in the traditional hitching pose: waving signs or thumbs at passing motorists.
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