the hell
English
Adverb
- (mildly vulgar) Used to indicate emphatic rejection of an assertion.
- A: I can run faster than a horse.
- B: The hell you can!
- (mildly vulgar) Expletive used for emphasis after an interrogative term or relative pronoun.
- 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, Southern Daily Echo:
- "Whoever the hell is running the place now has made a terrible mess of it," he said... "Not in the sense that it looks different, or that it isn't pretty much permanently full. It's just that the food as gone utterly down the khazi."
- What the hell was that?
- 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, Southern Daily Echo:
Synonyms
- (rejection): like hell, the hell you say
- (expletive): For semantic relationships of this sense, see the dickens in the Thesaurus.
Translations
Interjection
- (mildly vulgar) Clipping of what the hell: an exclamation indicating surprise or dismay.
- 2013, Jonathan Latimer, The Lady in the Morgue, →ISBN, (Google books online):
- “She said she had a date later!”
- “The hell!” exclaimed Crane.
- 2013, Jonathan Latimer, The Lady in the Morgue, →ISBN, (Google books online):
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