1. harken - Verb
3. Harken - Proper noun
To hearken.
Source: Webster's dictionaryA major issue in the campaign concerned Bush’s sale of all his Harken stock in June 1990, just days before the company completed a second quarter with heavy losses. Source: Internet
Lohengrin still contains lengthy performances—for example, Elsa's "Alone in dark days" and Lohengrin's Grail aria—which harken back to the classical solo aria form. Source: Internet
Cook-Hayman Pharmacy Museum Wander among wooden shelves displaying old-timey treatments and large glass orbs that harken to a time medicine was a little more quaint. Source: Internet
Exposed reclaimed antique timbers harken back to a European structure, providing old-world charm much like the antique Spanish gate the homeowners found at Round Top. Source: Internet
Then he dipped his head and bowed to Grandma Harken and a rattlesnake as long as a man slithered away into the evening. Source: Internet
They also harken back to landmark videos like Sinead O'Connor's unforgettable owning of Prince's "Nothing Compares 2 U" (directed by John Maybury) and D'Angelo's wildly misread challenge to the white gaze, (directed by Paul Hunter and Dominique Trenier). Source: Internet