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thirl. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
thirl, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
thirl in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
thirl you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English thirl, thiril, from Old English þyrel (“hole”), from Proto-West Germanic *þurhil, from Proto-Germanic *þurhilą (“hole, opening”), from Proto-Indo-European *tr̥h₂kʷelo- which is *tr̥h₂kʷe + *-lo (equivalent to through + -le) from *terh₂-. Related to thrill, drill.
Noun
thirl (plural thirls)
- (archaic or dialectal) A hole, an aperture, especially a nostril.
- (dialectal) A low door in a dry-stone wall to allow sheep to pass through; a smoot.
- (mining, possibly obsolete) A short communication between adits in a mine.
- (mining, possibly obsolete) A long adit in a coalpit.
Etymology 2
From Middle English thirlen, thurlen, thorlen, from Old English þȳrlian (“to pierce”), from the noun (see above). Doublet of thrill.
Verb
thirl (third-person singular simple present thirls, present participle thirling, simple past and past participle thirled)
- (transitive, possibly obsolete, puristic) To pierce; to perforate, penetrate, cut through.
- 1567, Arthur Golding: Ovid's Metamorphoses Bk. 3 lines 78-81
- But yet his hardnesse savde him not against the piercing dart.
- For hitting right betweene the scales that yeelded in that part
- Whereas the joynts doe knit the backe, it thirled through the skin,
- And pierced to his filthy mawe and greedy guts within.
- (transitive, mining, obsolete) To drill or bore; to cut through, as a partition between one working and another.
Derived terms
Etymology 3
Uncertain. Perhaps a blend of throw + hurl.
Verb
thirl (third-person singular simple present thirls, present participle thirling, simple past and past participle thirled)
- (obsolete) To throw (a projectile).
- , II.8:
- And many Authours doe in this manner wound the protection of their cause, by over-rashly running against that which they take hold-of, thirling such darts at their enemies, that might with much more advantage be cast at them.
Etymology 4
Dialectal alteration of thrall.
Verb
thirl (third-person singular simple present thirls, present participle thirling, simple past and past participle thirled)
- (historical, transitive) To legally bind (a tenant) to the use of one's own property as an owner.
- (by extension) To bind; to obligate to use or be associated with.
1951, Josephine Tey, The Daughter of Time, page 10:Was everyone nowadays thirled to a formula?
2005, Alexander McCall Smith, 44 Scotland Street:And there are plenty of people — Labour politicians, for example — who want people to remain thirled to poverty, who do not want them to have any spirit or independence.
Noun
thirl (plural thirls)
- (historical) A thrall.
Middle English
Etymology
From Old English þyrel, from Proto-West Germanic *þurhil, from Proto-Germanic *þurhilą.
Pronunciation
Noun
thirl (plural thirls)
- An external bodily orifice.
Descendants
References