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Hoard   /hɔrd/   Listen
Hoard

noun
1.
A secret store of valuables or money.  Synonyms: cache, stash.
verb
(past & past part. hoarded; pres. part. hoarding)
1.
Save up as for future use.  Synonyms: cache, hive up, lay away, squirrel away, stash.
2.
Get or gather together.  Synonyms: accumulate, amass, collect, compile, pile up, roll up.  "She is amassing a lot of data for her thesis" , "She rolled up a small fortune"



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"Hoard" Quotes from Famous Books



... vineyards, so close is the network of legend that the swiftly read or spoken tale of one locality is scarce over ere the traveller is confronted by another. It is a surfeit of romance, an inexhaustible hoard of the ...
— Hero Tales and Legends of the Rhine • Lewis Spence

... a lot from boys By the way they use their toys; Some are selfish in their care, Never very glad to share Playthings with another boy; Seem to want to hoard their joy. And they hide away the drum For the days that never come; Hide the train of cars and skates, Keeping them from all their mates, And run all their boyhood through With their ...
— The Path to Home • Edgar A. Guest

... gift, and turned pale as she saw that she had actually worn dried mushrooms on a string, twisted of withered rushes. Albert observed her perplexity, and laughed. He bantered her, and snatched two or three mushrooms from the chain, to hoard up for future sport. This was the token of their reconciliation. Maud, although very calmly, assured her lover, over and over again, that within a month their nuptials should take place. That the tired old man might not be disturbed, Albert went home early; and Maud hastened to put carefully away, ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 55, No. 344, June, 1844 • Various

... the little real hoard, The secret tears, the sudden chivalries; The tragic love, the futile triumph—where? Thief, dog, and son of ...
— The Wild Knight and Other Poems • Gilbert Chesterton

... however, with the idea that your father and mother and the rest were faring just as badly as myself, and I looked forward to the time when the birds would begin to lay eggs again, when I resolved to hoard up a much larger supply while they were fresh. But my schemes were all put an end to, for in two days, after a great deal of noise and flying about in circles, all the birds, young and old, took wing, and left me without any means of ...
— The Little Savage • Captain Marryat


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