sool

See also: sóol, so·ol, and sóól

English

Etymology

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -uːl

Verb

sool (third-person singular simple present sools, present participle sooling, simple past and past participle sooled)

  1. (Australia) To encourage (especially a dog) to attack.
    My neighbour sooled her bull mastiff onto my chihuahua, because she was sick of its yapping and wanted it to meet its demise.
    • 1896, K. Langloh Parker, Australian Legendary Tales, Nutt, page 91:
      She went quickly towards her camp, calling softly, "Birree gougou," which meant "Sool 'em, sool 'em," and was the signal for the dogs to come out.
    • 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter VIII, pp. 120-121,
      So he had to satisfy his lust for homicide with passing on the urges of the Propagandists and sooling the able-bodied off to war and hounding pacifists and enemies into retirement.

Usage notes

  • Usually in the form "sool someone onto someone/something".

Synonyms

Derived terms

Anagrams


Estonian

Etymology 1

From Proto-Finnic *sooli. Cognate with Finnish suoli.

Noun

sool (genitive soole, partitive soolt)

  1. (anatomy) intestine, bowel, gut
Declension

Etymology 2

From Proto-Finnic *soola. Cognate with Finnish suola.

Noun

sool (genitive soola, partitive soola)

  1. salt
Declension
Derived terms
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