هاڙ हाड़ hāṛ
H هاڙ हाड़ hāṛ [S. हड्डं], s.m. A bone;—a skeleton:—hāṛ-joṛā, s.m. One who sets bones;—the plant Cissus quadrangularis:—gale-ke hāṛ honā, To worry, to persecute.
هار हार hār
H هار हार hār [dialec. हारि hāri;—hār(nā)+Prk. इअ=S. (इ)त्वा], conj. part. (of hārnā, q.v.), Being beaten or overcome, &c.:—hār, or hār-kar, adv. Being beaten or overcome; perforce, under restraint or compulsion, compulsorily, forcibly; unwillingly, reluctantly;—when all's done, at last (also hār-jhak-mārke).
هار हार hār
H هار हार hār [perhaps S. हल्यं;Prk. हल्लं (?); or akin to hār, 'a garland,' &c.], s.m. Cultivated land surrounding a village (a little further off than the goṅrā); a village-common; a cultivated tract; a plot or allotment of ground;—a field;—pasturage.
هار हार hār
H هار हार hār [v.n. fr. hārnā, q.v.; or S. हारिः], s.f. Fatigue, weariness;—defeat, discomfiture;—forfeiture; loss:—hār-jīt, s.f. Defeat and victory; losing and winning; loss and gain;—hazard, play, gambling:—hār-jīt karnā, To gamble, to play at hazard; to bet:—hār mānnā or mān-lenā, To acknowledge oneself beaten, to accept defeat; to submit, bow (to); to give up a contest or dispute; to give up in despair:—hār-hārī, s.f. The division of a bankrupt's effects.
هار हार hār
H هار हार hār = H هارا हारा hārā [Ap. Prk. अडं and अडअं (with euphonic h inserted); S. क+रं or र+कं], suff. (f. -ī), added to infinitives to form, 1˚ part. fut. act., or 2˚ nouns of agency (the inf. aff., in Western Hindī, generally takes the form an or ne = Prk.अणअ or अणिअ=S. अनीय; in East. H. ani or ni = Prk. अणिअ, &c.), e.g. karan-hār, or karne-hār or hārā (E. H. karani-hār or hārā), 'about to do; one who is going to do; doer';—hon-hār, or honi-hār, 'what is to be; possible; future.' In W. H. this suff. frequently takes the form wālā or wārā (euphonic w taking the place of h), e.g. dene-wālā or dene-wārā (f. -wālī, &c.), 'about to give; one who is about to give; a giver.' The suff. hār and hārā are frequently confounded with the secondary suff. wālā, q.v.; e.g. lakaṛ-hārā, 'a woodman.' (It would perhaps be more correct to regard these suff. as being ˚anhār, ˚anehār, ˚anihār, &c., and to consider them as attached to the roots of verbs; e.g. mar-anhār, fr. rt. mar; but the popular notion is that the suffixes are hār, &c., and are joined to infinitives; and hence, probably, the confusion between these suffixes and the suffix wālā.)