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haul down

B2 neutral separable transitive
In simple words

To pull something large and heavy down from where it is raised.

Literal meaning: To pull or drag something down from a height with effort.

Meanings

1 B2 neutral

To pull a flag, sail, or similar object down from a raised position, especially as a sign of surrender or the end of use.

"The soldiers hauled down the flag as night fell over the abandoned fort."

"They hauled down the Confederate flag from the statehouse grounds."

— Associated Press, reporting on events in South Carolina, July 2015
Grammar: separable
2 C1 idiomatic formal

To bring down or defeat a powerful person or institution.

"The journalist's exposé hauled down one of the most corrupt officials in the city's history."

Grammar: separable
Usage notes

Most commonly used in nautical contexts (lowering sails) and in the ceremonial context of lowering a flag in defeat or surrender. Also used in logging and heavy industry. Can be used figuratively to mean defeating or removing someone from power.

Commonly used with

flag sail colors banner mast blinds

Forms

Base
haul down
I/you/we/they
3rd person
hauls down
he/she/it
Past simple
hauled down
yesterday
Past participle
hauled down
have + pp
-ing form
hauling down
continuous

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