hue
91Hue and cry — Hue and cry is an expression that used to mean all the people who joined in chasing a criminal or villain. Nowadays, if you do something without hue and cry, you do it discreetly and without drawing attention …
92hue-and-cri|er — «HYOO uhn KRY uhr», noun. a person who raises a hue and cry about some condition in protest or alarm …
93Hue-han — Hue han, Stadt, so v.w. Fai fo …
94Hue de Grais — (spr. hü dö grǟ), Robert, Graf, preuß. Verwaltungsbeamter und Theoretiker des Verwaltungsrechts, geb. 25. Aug. 1835 in Wolkramshausen bei Nordhausen, ward 1860 Regierungsassessor in Minden, dann in Koblenz, 1867 Kreishauptmann in Hildesheim, 1879 …
95hue and cry — the making of an outcry. In early English law, if the locals did not make an outcry and pursue and catch a felon or robber within forty days, they were made liable to the victim. Collins dictionary of law. W. J. Stewart. 2001 …
96Hue, Lightness, Saturation — [Abk. HLS, dt. »Farbton, Helligkeit, Sättigung], HSB Modell …
97Hue, Saturation, Brightness — [dt. »Farbton, Sättigung, Helligkeit«], HSB Modell …
98hue and cry — noun singular a lot of complaints and protests from the public about something …
99hue and cry — hue′ and cry′ n. 1) public clamor 2) law (formerly) the pursuit of a felon with loud outcries • Etymology: 1250–1300; ME, trans. of AF hu et cri …
100hue and cry — [n] public clamor brouhaha, bugle call, hullabaloo, outcry, protest, rallying cry, uproar; concepts 46,65,106,674 …