The word "hale" is correct and usable in written English. It can be used as an adjective, meaning "healthy and strong," or a verb, meaning "to summon" or "to drag away." Example sentence: The hale athlete ran the course in record time.
The two look so hale it's disconcerting.
There's still much brow-furrowing and brush-stabbing to Timothy Spall's hale, hearty, grunty performance as JMW Turner – an acquired taste, for all the garlands lavished upon it – but it's in the service of a narrative that locates an honest streak of mania in the man's genius.
Trade looks remarkably hale given recent headwinds.
In time, the Swedish economy might be hale enough for rates to rise again.
Unlike Hale-Bopp, the last comet to register on the public consciousness, Comet McNaught seems to have caught astronomers napping.
JUICY profits, increased investment, lean, more competitive workforces, flexible management: any sentient beings lurking inside the Hale-Bopp comet would, if interested in earthlings' business affairs, be rather impressed with the recent performance of Germany's leading companies.
They believed that they were about to be taken to a higher level by a spacecraft travelling in the wake of the Hale-Bopp comet.The trial of Timothy McVeigh, accused of the Oklahoma City bombing in April 1995, opened in Denver with jury selection.Refugees flooded into towns in Colombia's north-western Uraba region.
I love the desktop app, it’s always running on my Mac. Ludwig is the best English buddy, it answers my 100 queries per day and stays cool.
Cristina Valenza
Retail Lead Linguist @ Apple Inc.