Haunt /(hänt; 277)/
Haunt
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Haunted; p. pr. & vb. n. Haunting
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To frequent; to resort to frequently; to visit pertinaciously or intrusively; to intrude upon.
You wrong me, sir, thus still to haunt my house.
Those cares that haunt the court and town.
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To inhabit or frequent as a specter; to visit as a ghost or apparition; -- said of spirits or ghosts, especially of dead people; as, the murdered man haunts the house where he died.
Foul spirits haunt my resting place.
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To practice; to devote one's self to. [Obs.]
That other merchandise that men haunt with fraud . . . is cursed.
Leave honest pleasure, and haunt no good pastime.
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To accustom; to habituate. [Obs.]
Haunt thyself to pity.
Haunt
v. i.
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To persist in staying or visiting.
I've charged thee not to haunt about my doors.
Haunt
n.
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A place to which one frequently resorts; as, drinking saloons are the haunts of tipplers; a den is the haunt of wild beasts.
The household nook, The haunt of all affections pure.
The feeble soul, a haunt of fears.
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The habit of resorting to a place. [Obs.]
The haunt you have got about the courts.
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Practice; skill. [Obs.]
Of clothmaking she hadde such an haunt.