Grammatical mood expressing exhortation, insistence, or encouragement.
1A hort consultant John Wilton says it's been caused by two things.
2Probably most of the homes had "hort yards" and gardens.
3One of the ferry hands not understanding, called to the stranger, "Hoot mon, ye maunna hort oor dawg."
4You'd need a hord hort in the repossession business, but I'd swear JP's actually enjoying making these little kids cry.
5See also a paper by this observer read before the International Hort.
6The earlier portion was fairly described by the Committee of the Bangor Hort.
7Notes on cultivated Plants' by Dr. A. Targioni- Tozzetti in 'Journal of Hort.
8It was very good of you to put in both numbers of the Hort.
9The state of my health prevents my attending the Hort.
10Hunyadi, or Kalimann, was regarded in Hort as a freethinker.
11AUTHORITIES-On the apocryphal Books of Adam, see Hort, Dict.
12But-butI can stay no longer here at Gyongos, I must go to Hort.
13See also Dr. Caspary's paper in 'Transactions of the Hort.
14He called them "pot" roots and sometimes he called them "blow horts".
15Mr. Bentham 'Review of Dr. A. Targioni-Tozzetti, Journal of Hort.
16The following details are taken from the 'Catalogue of Fruits, 1842 in Garden of Hort.