hugen

English

Etymology

From huge + -en.

Verb

hugen (third-person singular simple present hugens, present participle hugening, simple past and past participle hugened)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To make or become huge.
    • 2010, Jack Kerouac, ‎Allen Ginsberg, ‎Bill Morgan, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters:
      [] he looks great with that carnation, he's a lovely fellow, tell him I look forward to drinking him under the table any time, I've changed and can now drink him under the table my gullet is so hugened. I'm a wino in Frisco temporarily.
    • 2018, Ian Burns, Messing With Your Mind, page 307:
      Monsoonical demons rushed through the forest, their silent wind waterfalling through the branches, whipping a hundred billion leavesinto crashing disharmony, stripping the weak from the few strong, transforming them into a cauldroning, hugening mass of menace, blanketing, overwhelming, unstoppable, inescapable, impossible, a comet, a meteor, a planet of power, breaking everything in its path, accreting power from the destroyed, mindless power, world changing power, a roiling, ravishing, rolling revolution, a swathe of...nothing, of broken dreams, broken hopes, broken plans, emptiness, falling leaves, falling twigs, falling dust, falling rain, new soil, creating, creating new life, creating new hope, creating new dreams; monsoonical angels.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Noun

hugen m

  1. singular definite of hug
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