wrawl

English

Etymology

From Middle English wrawlen. Compare Danish vråle.

Verb

wrawl (third-person singular simple present wrawls, present participle wrawling, simple past and past participle wrawled)

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) To cry like a cat; to waul.
    • Edmund Spenser, Faerie Queene, Book VI. Canto 12.
      Some were of dogs, that barked day and night, And some of cats, that wrawling still did cry.
    • Thomas Hoccleve , The Plowman’s Tale, part 1.
      Such successours [of Peter] yben to bolde, In winning all ther witte thei wral.
    • 1908, Will Sparks, Philopolis, volume 3, page 139:
      The fog horns groaned and groaned again, and siren whistled and wrawled.
    • 1601, Philemon Holland, The Historie of the World, Book VII.
      Man alone, poore wretch, she hath laid all naked upon the bare earth, even on his birth-day, to cry and wraule presently from the very first houre that he is borne into this worlde.
    • 1603, Philemon Holland, Plutarch, Plutarch's Moralia.
      Howbeit, crying and wrawling as like as possibly might be to an infant new come into the world.

Derived terms

References

  • wrawl in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
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