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hail-fellow
[heyl-fel-oh, heyl-fel-oh]
noun
Also hail fellow, hail-fellow well met a spiritedly sociable person; jolly companion.
adjective
sociable; heartily genial.
His hail-fellow manner helped him to advance in the sales force.
Word History and Origins
Origin of hail-fellow1
Example Sentences
The intruder was a stranger to the admiral, but he knew a few of his fellow diners, shook their hands, and then with a hail-fellow grin introduced himself to Admiral Hayes.
And he's not very good at faking the hail-fellow camaraderie that is part of American public life, either.
He was young and energetic—he had a certain breezy geniality of manner, and was very much hail-fellow well-met with all classes.
He and the old colleges were hail-fellow well met; and in the quadrangles, he “walked gowned.”
When we played with jack-straws, we were hail-fellow with those who now oppose us.
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