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Dictionary
hitch
noun
A sudden pull.
Exact(12)
Some see the label as an opportunity to hitch global financial systems firmly to sustainable development goals.
Ways need to be found to hitch up other areas with the vanguard sites so that they can learn as the work progresses.
But unlike Airbnb or Uber, which take explicit aim at breaking into specific industries, Djump and Peerby are non-monetised apps that simply make it easier for city people to do what small-town folk have always done: hitch a ride, borrow some sugar.
Equipment is carried by camel and kids can also hitch a ride, which should keep cries of "I'm tired... ...... to a minimum.
Set that Stetson squarely on your head and hitch up your cutoff jeans, we're in for a country music revival in the UK this summer.
In the analogue 1980s, I took a year off college to hitch around Europe in search of adventure and enlightenment.
For much of the evening they are threading collar studs, removing shoe trees and making cups of tea for you in the interval, but during a quick change their abilities are tested to the limit, because the slightest hitch can transform the most equable actor into a raving psychotic in seconds.
But there is a hitch.
The operation went without a hitch".
But there is a hitch: true localism does not always lead to draconian criminal justice.Return to those cruel boys.
American astronauts wanting to go to the International Space Station have to hitch a ride with the Russians, at a cost of $71m a seat.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com