The man decided to haul the heavy rocks up to the curb on his back, however he had to claw his way up the hill.
He likes to haul things.
"Now that I have chopped all of this wood, I need to haul it back to the house."
Please don't be offended if I ask you to haul your problem down the hall. The bank robber left his haul in the hall. In which hall will I find the refuse you wish me to haul away?
A homophone for "haul" is "hall." Both words are pronounced the same way but have different meanings.
The miners attempted to haul the gold out in hand carts. The trip to Anchorage was a long haul for the produce truck.
Some homophones for "hall" are haul, haw, and hal.
They were hauling hales of bay by tractor, to the barn They hauled the suspect into the court room Please, haul down the flag from the pole
The logger use a cable to girdle the log before signalling the crane operator to haul it up the slope.
The kitchen renovation cost $20,000. A renovation is a complete over-haul of a room or building.
No, the word "haul" is not an adverb.The word "haul" is a verb and a noun.
It wouldn't be a picnic without the ants that haul away chunks of bread or cookie twice their size. Prepositions are the ants of the grammar world. Prepositions aren't usually very big words, but they have a surprising power to change a sentence's meaning.
short haul in stm1 is below 30km and long haul which works for more then 30km.. there are differenet equipments for short haul and long haul.. working different wavelenght. long haul can work one 1310 nm and 1550nm.. but short haul can work on 1310 nm only..