eyethurl

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English

Etymology

Calque of Old English ēagþyrel, equivalent to eye +‎ thurl (hole).

Noun

eyethurl (plural eyethurls)

  1. (rare) A window.
    • 1978, Stuart Diamond, Paul S. Lorris, It’s in Your Power: The Concerned Energy Consumer’s Survival Kit, New York, N.Y.: Rawson Associates Publishers, Inc., →ISBN, page 135, column 2:
      Hark! What light through yonder eyethurl breaks.
    • 1979, Susan Kelz Sperling, The New Book of Knowledge Annual 1979, Danbury, Conn.: Grolier, →ISBN, page 319:
      I was watching the sunset through our eyethurl when I heard strange slurping noises just a wurp away.
    • 1979 September 24, Lauren Calobrisi, “ Story Time: The Kotee and the Bellibone”, in Newsday, Suffolk edition, volume 40, number 22, Long Island, N.Y.: Newsday Inc., part II, page 14:
      There he saw a bellibone sticking her head out of an eyethurl and crying. [] He threw the rope up to the eyethurl.
    • 1985, Cathryn Berger Kaye, Word Works: Why the Alphabet Is a Kid’s Best Friend (A Brown Paper School Book), Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown and Company, →ISBN, page 99, column 1:
      Glancing out the eyethurl of her modest cosh, she saw a blue scrow—a good sign for a new day.
    • 1985 March 13, The Central and North Jackson County Star, Kansas City, Mo., page 11B:
      Beware of eyethurls that rob home of cooling and heating energy
    • 1987 November 14, Linda Kirlis, “Sheart, I’m shittled: A tale for lovers of rare words”, in The Whig-Standard Magazine, Kingston, Ont., page 31:
      I drag my weary bones from my donge, glance out of the eyethurl, realize that it is barely sparrowfart and I have to iswonk until dimpse.
    • 1990 November 28, Herald & Review, 118th year, number 332, Decatur, Ill., page Focus 4:
      Eyethurls” Upgrade Home
    • 1992 June 24, Billy Porterfield, “Perot, Clinton, Bush leave voter all agruw”, in Austin American-Statesman, Austin, Tex., page B6, column 1:
      Kew-kaw Perot liked the beek, saw an eyethurl, now not so small, to the presidency.
    • 1993 October 5, Adrienne Jenkins, “ Pleasure”, in The Daily Times, Salisbury, Md., School Zone, page 2, column 3:
      So, when Pleasure was riding on her blonke, a knight named Louis was staring out of his eyethurl.
    • 1995 summer, “Snappy Decors”, in Home: A Guide to Residential Living in Williamsburg and the Surrounding Communities (The Virginia Gazette), Williamsburg, Va., page 8:
      Eyethurls open way to brightness
    • 2012 November, Leon Robert McNarry, “The Erendrake”, in Poems, Tales & Whimsy, Victoria, B.C.: FriesenPress, →ISBN, page 28:
      In the quiet cockshut after a heavy darg, a boonfellow likes to croodle with her fanger (or he with his bellibone) as they watch the sunset through the eyethurl.