hashes 1 of 2

plural of hash

hashes

2 of 2

verb

present tense third-person singular of hash

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of hashes
Noun
Which is, on paper, a savvy complement to Sutton, who can move the chains, body up smaller foes outside the hashes and win jump balls in the end zone. Sean Keeler, Denver Post, 21 Mar. 2026 Ham often goes on promotion in November and makes excellent leftovers for sandwiches and breakfast hashes, Clarke adds. Liz Regalia, Parents, 12 Nov. 2025 Three decades ago, that design was adequate, and hardware couldn’t support slower hashes well anyway. Jonathan M. Gitlin, ArsTechnica, 18 Sep. 2025 Researchers at GuidePoint have published a YARA detection rule, along with file names, service names, SHA-256 hashes, and file paths to help identify this activity. Kurt Knutsson, FOXNews.com, 29 Aug. 2025 To answer this first question, an analyst begins by extracting all of the indicators—which could be in the hundreds—including domains, hashes, IP addresses and URLs. Alex Lanstein, Forbes.com, 4 Aug. 2025 Worldcoin’s head of blockchain, Remco Bloemen, says that even if the company’s ZKPs were cracked, there wouldn’t be a leak of biometric information, as the ZPKs aren’t connected to users’ iris hashes and are based only on their private keys. Edd Gent, IEEE Spectrum, 22 Dec. 2022
Verb
The production duo’s busy, silly, next-gen footwork hashes underground rap microgenres and recognizable samples into dreamy collagist fantasies. Rae-Aila Crumble, Pitchfork, 26 Jan. 2026
Recent Examples of Synonyms for hashes
Noun
  • Arachnids, including spiders (most common varieties) and scorpions.
    Alora Bopray, USA Today, 1 July 2026
  • Because its founders, the Faro family, built a small empire in Sicily from an ornamental plant business that grew into one of the largest Mediterranean plant nurseries in Europe, exporting more than 5,000 varieties to 60 countries.
    Winston Ross, Forbes.com, 30 June 2026
Verb
  • Consider two investors, one who invests $7,500 at the beginning of the year, and another who chops it up into $288 biweekly investments.
    Ryan Ermey, CNBC, 24 Feb. 2026
  • The proposal chops $150 million from the Developmental Disabilities Administration, which battled against the largest budget cut in last year's negotiations.
    JT Moodee Lockman, CBS News, 21 Jan. 2026
Verb
  • Live Local also disrupts years of successful and careful planning by the city to promote compatible, consistent development in neighborhoods like Wynwood.
    Andres Viglucci, Miami Herald, 1 July 2026
  • After all, the status quo looks safer than making a big bet on something that disrupts everything from operations to revenue.
    James Loffler, Forbes.com, 1 July 2026
Noun
  • McGinty said many of the styles now gaining broader visibility — salt-and-pepper diamonds, hexagon and kite-cut stones, Montana sapphires and heavier gold settings — were already in demand with her clients years before appearing in larger retail assortments.
    Lauren Fisher, Footwear News, 26 June 2026
  • The assortments give shoppers a chance to try several scent profiles without committing to one full-size luxury bottle.
    Lauren Jarvis-Gibson, Miami Herald, 18 June 2026
Verb
  • Driven by revenge and madness, Sweeney Todd slices necks he is meant to just shave.
    Christopher Arnott, Hartford Courant, 16 June 2026
  • Her foot slices down the side of the ball.
    Jack Lang, New York Times, 9 June 2026
Verb
  • At the sound of morning prayers, an older Clarissa awakens from this dream and shuffles out to her lawn, where the leafy bush has been replaced with the industrial skyline of Lagos.
    Lovia Gyarkye, HollywoodReporter, 16 May 2026
  • Tristan returns home and greets James while Siegfried shuffles the woman out the window.
    Alice Burton, Vulture, 12 Jan. 2026
Noun
  • Arches and natural bridges sweep like buttresses from jumbles of rock, giving this landscape a mystical, cathedral-like quality.
    Madison Chapman, Outside, 25 Mar. 2026
  • Macaroons are chewy jumbles of coconut bound together with egg whites and sweetened condensed milk.
    Lynda Balslev, Mercury News, 10 Feb. 2026
Verb
  • These opportunists drown out the core mission, creating a cacophony of competing voices that confuses donors, crowd the inboxes of CEOs and members of Congress with colliding petitions, and paralyzes meaningful action by draining critical funding and attention away from the truly effective groups.
    Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Time, 28 June 2026
  • But nobody confuses Harvard Extension School classes with the real thing.
    Liz Hoffman, semafor.com, 23 June 2026

Cite this Entry

“Hashes.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/hashes. Accessed 6 Jul. 2026.

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