Associations to the word «Harry»
Noun
- Potter
- Hermione
- Truman
- Nilsson
- Wand
- Sirius
- Goblet
- Debbie
- Susie
- Ron
- Granada
- Enfield
- Claire
- Osborn
- Cedric
- Rex
- Conqueror
- Callahan
- Reid
- Carey
- Respite
- Lauren
- Potion
- Eastwood
- Wessex
- Hound
- Dempsey
- Andy
- Domesday
- Dexter
- Neville
- Stanton
- Ransom
- Analyzer
- Rees
- Enoch
- Headlight
- Tim
- Frazer
- Abrams
- Shreveport
- Hess
- Lockhart
- Edison
- Lobo
- Moody
- Revel
- Wick
- Deborah
- Ellington
- Slang
- Predicament
- Rout
- Plurality
- Cauldron
- Firth
- Waiter
- Kathryn
- Ferocity
- Chronicler
- Housemate
- Dylan
- Radcliffe
- Raider
- Mack
- Darcy
- Harlow
- Mayo
- Thurston
- Hotspur
- Mali
- Baylor
- Dalton
- Flank
- Torment
- Dane
- Harrow
- Schwarz
- Orc
- Langdon
- Styles
- Badger
- Malwa
Adverb
Wiktionary
HARRY, verb. (transitive) To bother; to trouble.
HARRY, verb. To strip; to lay waste.
HARRY, proper noun. A male given name, also used as a pet form of Henry and Harold.
HARRY, proper noun. (rare compared to given name) A patronymic surname.
HARRY HUN, proper noun. (UK) (derogatory) A name used to represent the German people.
Dictionary definition
HARRY, verb. Annoy continually or chronically; "He is known to harry his staff when he is overworked"; "This man harasses his female co-workers".
HARRY, verb. Make a pillaging or destructive raid on (a place), as in wartimes.
Wise words
The most important things are the hardest things to say.
They are the things you get ashamed of because words
diminish your feelings - words shrink things that seem
timeless when they are in your head to no more than living
size when they are brought out.