To suspend; to fasten to some elevated point without support from below; often used with up or out; as, to hang a coat on a hook; to hang up a sign; to hang out a banner
If someone is hanged or if they hang, they are killed, usually as a punishment, by having a rope tied around their neck and the support taken away from under their feet. The five were expected to be hanged at 7 am on Tuesday It is right that their murderers should hang He hanged himself two hours after arriving at a mental hospital. + hanging hangings hang·ing Four steamboat loads of spectators came to view a hanging in New Orleans
To play the sixth domino of a suit when the double has not yet been played, because the person holding the double will never be able to play it This is a devestating play which is quite fun to make, and is the reason beginners are urged to get rid of their doubles as soon as possible
A piece of cloth, usually square and often fine and elegant, carried for wiping the face or hands
bent: a special way of doing something; "he had a bent for it"; "he had a special knack for getting into trouble"; "he couldn't get the hang of it"
If something such as someone's breath or smoke hangs in the air, it remains there without appearing to move or change position. His breath was hanging in the air before him