Word
Of
The
Day
hale
hale \HAIL\
adjective
Someone described as hale is in good and often exceptional health.
Hale is commonly used in the phrase "hale and hearty."
// Their mother remains
hale and hearty in her old age.
See the entry >
Examples:
"Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell star [in the film
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes] as two vivacious all-American showgirls whose friendship is as fast as their attitudes to men are poles apart. Whereas Monroe's Lorelei Lee prizes wealth and devotion in a suitor, Russell's Dorothy Shaw is more inclined towards the
hale and hunky ..." — Robbie Collin,
The Telegraph (United Kingdom), 2 May 2026
Did you know?
English has two
hale homographs: the adjective that is frequently paired with
hearty to describe those healthy and strong, and the somewhat uncommon verb that has to do with literal or figurative hauling or pulling. (One can hale a boat onto shore, or hale a person into a courtroom with the aid of legal ramifications for resistance.) The verb comes from the Middle English
halen (also the root of our word
haul), but the adjective has a bifurcated origin, with two Middle English terms identified as sources:
hale and
hail. Both of those come from words meaning "healthy," the former from the Old English
hāl, and the latter from the Old Norse
heill. The Middle English
hail is also the source of the three modern English words spelled as
hail, the verb, interjection, and noun that have to do with greeting.