The Britannica Dictionary
mobile search
Home
Ask the Editor
Word of the Day
Quizzes
Core Vocabulary
Browse the Dictionary
×
Britannica Homepage
Ask the Editor
Word of the Day
Quizzes
Core Vocabulary
Browse the Dictionary
The Britannica Dictionary
hark
1 ENTRIES FOUND:
hark
(verb)
hark
/
ˈ
hɑɚk/
verb
harks
;
harked
;
harking
hark
/
ˈ
hɑɚk/
verb
harks
;
harked
;
harking
Britannica Dictionary definition of HARK
[
no object
]
old-fashioned + literary
:
listen
—
usually used as a command
“
Hark
! I hear a rustling of the leaves.”
H. D. Thoreau,
Walden
(1854)
“
Hark
, she speaks!”
Shakespeare,
Macbeth
(1605–06)
[+] more examples
[-] hide examples
[+] Example sentences
[-] Hide examples
hark back to
[
phrasal verb
]
1
hark back to (something)
:
to return to or remember (something in the past)
He always
harks back to
the good old days of his youth.
[+] more examples
[-] hide examples
[+] Example sentences
[-] Hide examples
2
:
to look or seem like (something in the past)
The movie has a style that
harks back to
the golden age of Hollywood.
[+] more examples
[-] hide examples
[+] Example sentences
[-] Hide examples
ASK THE EDITOR
What are the plural forms of
check-in
,
passerby
, and
spoonful
?
See the answer »
QUIZZES
Vocabulary Quiz
Test your word power
Take the Quiz »
Name That Thing
Take our visual quiz
Test Your Knowledge »
WORD OF THE DAY
emulate
:
to try to be like (someone or something you admire)
Learn More »