awheel

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English

Etymology

From a- +‎ wheel.

Pronunciation

Adverb

awheel (not comparable)

  1. (dated) Riding a bicycle.
    • 1944 January and February, E. R. McCarter, “The Cairn Valley Light Railway”, in Railway Magazine, page 48:
      Before the war, I used often to put my "bike" on the 12.20 p.m. (Saturdays only) and cover quite a lot of ground a-wheel before returning by another "Saturdays only" train leaving Moniaive about 10 p.m.
    • 2009 February 16, “Keeping it Reeled In”, in Bike Snob NYC, retrieved 2012-08-26:
      Originally we were supposed to conduct the interview on bikes (or "awheel" as the British say)
  2. (dated) Travelling by a wheeled vehicle.
    • 1927 October 1, Johnson, “Talk of the Town”, in New Yorker:
      [] an observer at large who chanced to be at the corner of Fourteenth Street and Seventh Avenue late one night when the traffic signals brought to a halt the few taxis that were awheel then.
  3. (poetic) Circling; moving in the shape of a wheel.
    • 1983, Poul Anderson, “The Sorrow of Odin the Goth”, in Time Patrolman (Sci-fi), Tom Doherty, →ISBN:
      Its light glimmered on the river and on the wings of carrion fowl awheel overhead.

References