I. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
hash browns
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
brown
▪
He had a trick of chopping up frying hash browns with the edge of an empty baking powder can.
▪
Now you can get pancakes, waffles and omelets with hash browns .
▪
If you are having hot cakes, also order hash browns .
▪
His western omelet comes with hash browns on the side and a superfluous garnish of an orange slice and parsley.
▪
Some picked at plates of eggs and hash browns until the session was called to order.
▪
An Egg McMuffin, hash browns and orange juice is more reasonable.
■ VERB
make
▪
But we know that we'd make a frightful hash of it.
▪
Such variations can make hash of attempts to say anything categorical about how people respond to alcohol.
▪
And then she's made a hash of that an'all.
▪
When ordinary people are called upon to make sense of this hash the results can be truly nutty.
▪
She knew she'd made a hash of the whole thing, and she'd let her tongue run away with her.
▪
He was entitled to look thoroughly cheesed off when Stewart made an awful hash of stumping Miandad.
▪
But if Labour do win they will make the usual hash of things and then the whole merry-go-round will begin again.
▪
Her prolonged absence had affected his concentration, and he'd made a hash of the signature of Percy Bysshe Shelley.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
corned-beef hash
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
I do canned corned beef hash too.
▪
The presents are unwrapped, the holiday turkey is hash , and the carols have all been sung.
▪
The smell of hash is strong.
▪
With uh, with some hash and then some tobacco.
II. verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
After signing a cooperation agreement May 11, the two airlines have been hashing out details.
▪
As we hashed out the deal, people on the trading floor began to grow curious.
▪
Company hopes to hash out an expansion agreement with venture capital groups in the next few months.
▪
On the radio, the same things get hashed and rehashed, over and over, day after day.
▪
The process is often also described as hashing.