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birl
[ burl ]
verb (used with object)
- Chiefly Northern U.S. Lumbering. to cause (a floating log) to rotate rapidly by treading upon it.
- British. to spin or cause to rotate.
verb (used without object)
- Chiefly Northern U.S. Lumbering. to cause a floating log to rotate rapidly by treading on it.
- British.
- to move or rotate rapidly.
- Informal. to spend money freely.
- Informal. to gamble.
noun
- British Informal. an attempt; a gamble.
birl
1/ bɜːl; bɪrl /
verb
- to spin; twirl
- to cause (a floating log) to spin using the feet while standing on it, esp as a sport among lumberjacks
noun
- a variant spelling of burl 2
birl
2/ bɪrl; bɜːl /
verb
- archaic.to ply (one's guests, etc) with drink
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Derived Forms
- ˈbirling, noun
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Other Words From
- birler noun
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of birl1
C18: probably imitative and influenced by whirl and hurl
Origin of birl2
Old English byrelian ; related to byrele cup-bearer
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Example Sentences
There was sea salt in the air, and sleepless seagulls were birling in the darkness overhead.
From The New Yorker
For years, Muir, a self-possessed 12-year-old from the East Bay, told his parents that he was a “birl”: part boy, part girl.
From Washington Post
Birl, birl, v.t. to spin anything round: to throw down a coin as one's share in a joint contribution.—v.i. to whirl round.
From Project Gutenberg
Oh, could I but snap his nerves one by one, and birl among his vitals!
From Project Gutenberg
Already he had mastered the rudiments of “birling,” and could run across floating logs, if not gracefully at least with slight chance of a ducking.
From Project Gutenberg
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