| 1. | Haint | ||
|
Southern colloquialism
def., ghost, apparition, lost soul On his way back from Mobile my friend was killed on Bloody 98, and now he's just another restless haint.
|
|||
| 2. | Haint | ||
|
Chiefly Southern U.S. var of haunt, originally, but the meaning has since morephed to mean more than a ghost. It can also mean a scary bitch or mean person, usually a woman. I tried to kill her with kindness, but that haint is just full up with meanness.
|
|||
| 3. | haint | ||
|
A ghost; a haunt; a spirit. She was terrified of the haint that kept showing itself to her at midnight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
| 4. | Haint | ||
|
noun,
1. A hateful bitch. 2. A truly heinous she-devil so brutal that anachronistic and unusual colloquial slang is called for. That haint never leaves a tip and still has a George W. Bush sticker on the back of her pink Hummer.
|
|||
| 5. | Haint | ||
|
In West Virginia it's a ghost It's Halloween; watch out for the boogers, witches,and haints
|
|||
| 6. | Haint | ||
|
a truly scary, evil witch That mean, ugly hag is a real haint.
|
|||
|
|
|||
| 7. | haint | ||
|
In western North Carolina, a haint is a ghost, a spook, but not the booger man. It's so dark outside you can't see a haint. - from my aunt Ethel Wallace nee Lawing, born North Carolina ca. 1895
|
|||
