I watched the egg hatch.
We decided to hatch the plan in motion.
Close the hatch, you're letting the Zombies in.
the hen's eggs are about to hatch!!
I opened the hatch on the submarine. I watched the egg hatch. The thieves got together to hatch a plan.
The snake was coiled and ready to strike. The rope was coiled on the deck, adjacent to the forward hatch.
They hatch from their eggs, and the wording of your sentence should be: How do snowy owl babies come into the world?
Secure that hatch! I'm ensuring the job site is secure; then I'm going home for the day.
The word hatch can be used as a noun but it can also be used in other forms such as a verb.
You didn't say which meaning you wanted, so here are a couple. He hit the clutch and shifted gears. The clutch of eggs is ready to hatch.
The submarine hatch forms a hermetic seal.
One such word is nuthatch. (a bird)
Yes, the word 'hatch' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'hatch' is a word for an opening in the deck or a ship, an airplane, a spaceship, a small car, a wall or roof of a building; the covering for such an opening; a word for a brood of young that has just emerged for their eggs; a word for a thing.
produce, breed
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE
These forces are much greater than any single entity. The disembodied entity floated down the stairwell and seemed to just flow right through that closed hatch.