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What is the noun for holde?

What's the noun for holde? Here's the word you're looking for.

hold
  1. (nautical) The cargo area of a ship or aircraft (often cargo hold).
  2. A place where animals are held for safety
  3. An order that something is to be reserved or delayed, limiting or preventing how it can be dealt with.
  4. Something reserved or kept.
  5. Power over someone or something.
  6. The ability to persist.
  7. The property of maintaining the shape of styled hair.
  8. (wrestling) A position or grip used to control the opponent.
  9. (exercise) An exercise involving holding a position for a set time
  10. (gambling) The percentage the house wins on a gamble, the house or bookmaker's hold.
  11. (gambling) The wager amount, the total hold.
  12. (tennis) An instance of holding one's service game, as opposed to being broken.
  13. The part of an object one is intended to grasp, or anything one can use for grasping with hands or feet.
  14. A fruit machine feature allowing one or more of the reels to remain fixed while the others spin.
  15. (video game) A pause facility.
  16. The queueing system on telephones and similar communication systems which maintains a connection when all lines are busy.
  17. (baseball) A statistic awarded to a relief pitcher who is not still pitching at the end of the game and who records at least one out and maintains a lead for his team.
  18. Synonyms:
  19. Examples:
    1. “The leader's hold on the country would grow increasingly tenuous as tensions in the populace mounted.”
      “I loosened my hold on his arm and turned him around to face me.”
      “The slope was getting increasingly steep, and our shoes were starting to lose their hold.”
hold
  1. A grasp or grip.
  2. A place where animals are held for safety
  3. An order that something is to be reserved or delayed, limiting or preventing how it can be dealt with.
    1. (transitive) To have and keep possession of something.
    2. (transitive) To reserve.
    3. (transitive) To cause to wait or delay.
    4. (transitive) To detain.
    5. (intransitive) To be or remain valid; to apply (usually in the third person).
    6. To keep oneself in a particular state.
    7. (transitive) To impose restraint upon; to limit in motion or action; to bind legally or morally; to confine; to restrain.
    8. (transitive) To bear, carry, or manage.
    9. (intransitive, chiefly imperative) Not to move; to halt; to stop.
    10. (intransitive) Not to give way; not to part or become separated; to remain unbroken or unsubdued.
    11. To remain continent; to control an excretory bodily function.
  4. Something reserved or kept.
    1. (transitive) To maintain, to consider, to opine.
    2. (transitive) To bind (someone) to a consequence of his or her actions.
    3. To maintain in being or action; to carry on; to prosecute, as a course of conduct or an argument; to continue; to sustain.
    4. To accept, as an opinion; to be the adherent of, openly or privately; to persist in, as a purpose; to maintain; to sustain.
    5. (archaic) To restrain oneself; to refrain; to hold back.
  5. Power over someone or something.
  6. The ability to persist.
  7. The property of maintaining the shape of styled hair.
  8. (wrestling) A position or grip used to control the opponent.
  9. (exercise) An exercise involving holding a position for a set time
  10. (gambling) The percentage the house wins on a gamble, the house or bookmaker's hold.
  11. (gambling) The wager amount, the total hold.
  12. (tennis) An instance of holding one's service game, as opposed to being broken.
  13. The part of an object one is intended to grasp, or anything one can use for grasping with hands or feet.
  14. A fruit machine feature allowing one or more of the reels to remain fixed while the others spin.
  15. (video game) A pause facility.
  16. The queueing system on telephones and similar communication systems which maintains a connection when all lines are busy.
  17. (baseball) A statistic awarded to a relief pitcher who is not still pitching at the end of the game and who records at least one out and maintains a lead for his team.
  18. Synonyms:
  19. Examples:
    1. “The leader's hold on the country would grow increasingly tenuous as tensions in the populace mounted.”
      “I loosened my hold on his arm and turned him around to face me.”
      “The slope was getting increasingly steep, and our shoes were starting to lose their hold.”
holding
  1. Something that one owns, especially stocks and bonds.
  2. A determination of law made by a court.
  3. A tenure; a farm or other estate held of another.
  4. (obsolete) That which holds, binds, or influences.
  5. (obsolete) Logic; consistency.
  6. (obsolete) The burden or chorus of a song.
  7. (in texts about Russia, nonstandard) A holding company, or other kind of company (by back-translation from Russian холдинг (xolding)).
  8. Synonyms:
  9. Examples:
    1. “For that analysis, we would review the specific facts of the case that are listed immediately following the Court's holding.”
      “In some countries like the US, the sponsor normally retains a significant holding in the IPO.”
      “They have a shopping membership of 115,000 housewives, each of whom has a personal holding in the $5,000,000 paid-up capital.”
holder
  1. A thing that holds.
  2. A person who temporarily or permanently possesses something.
  3. (nautical) One who is employed in the hold of a vessel.
  4. (sports) The defending champion.
  5. Synonyms:
  6. Examples:
    1. “However, instances exist where the holder of the land must accommodate the tenant's request.”
      “Magus sighed, and then resumed his carving as a servant ran over to retrieve the candle from the wall and place it back in its holder.”
      “When not in use, it may be stored in a holder that can be wall-mounted.”
holde
  1. Archaic spelling of hold.
holdings
  1. plural of holding
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Any sensible analysis would expand the definition of what functions as money to include holdings in money market funds.”
      “Poole's holdings also include building supply, realty, property management, and home-funding concerns.”
      “To get a true look at your portfolio, you're left with laborious pencilwork or keyboarding to merge these data with other holdings.”
holders
  1. plural of holder
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “These warrants entitle the holders to sell shares of the common stock to the Company on certain dates at specified prices.”
      “It is clear Equitable Life's decision to call a halt to new business has left many policy holders in a quandary.”
      “But it remains to be seen whether Bank of Scotland account holders will also benefit from such largesse.”
holds
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