scrawl
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /skɹɔːl/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - (cot–caught merger or dialectal) IPA(key): /skɹɑːl/
- Rhymes: -ɔːl
Etymology 1
Possibly from Middle English scraulen (“to spread out one's limbs; sprawl”), itself an alteration of spraulen (“to sprawl”) or craulen, crawlen (“to crawl”).
Alternatively, from scrall, a contraction of scrabble.
Noun
scrawl (countable and uncountable, plural scrawls)
- Irregular, possibly illegible handwriting.
- A hastily or carelessly written note etc.
- Writing that lacks literary merit.
- (countable, uncommon) A broken branch of a tree.
- (uncommon) The young of the dog-crab.
Translations
irregular handwriting
|
hastily or carelessly written note
Verb
scrawl (third-person singular simple present scrawls, present participle scrawling, simple past and past participle scrawled)
- (transitive) To write something hastily or illegibly.
- She scrawled the main points onto her notepad
- (intransitive) To write in an irregular or illegible manner.
- (intransitive) To write unskilfully and inelegantly.
- c. 1710-1730, Jonathan Swift (probably), Sandys's Ghost
- Though with a golden pen you scrawl.
- c. 1710-1730, Jonathan Swift (probably), Sandys's Ghost
Derived terms
Translations
to write hastily or illegibly
|
to write in an irregular or illegible manner
|
Etymology 2
From Middle English scraulen (“to crawl”), itself an alteration of crawlen (“to crawl”). More at crawl.
Verb
scrawl (third-person singular simple present scrawls, present participle scrawling, simple past and past participle scrawled)
- To creep; crawl; to move slowly, with difficulty, fearfully, or stealthily.
- November 9, 1550, Hugh Latimer, A Sermon preached at Stamford:
- we will scrape and scrawl, and catch and pull to us all that we may get
- 1797 (original possibly 1783), Josiah Relph, Poems by the Reverend Josiah Relph ... With the life of the author and a pastoral elegy on his death; by T. Sanderson, page 13:
- When I saw him scrawlen on the plain, My heart aw flacker'd for't, I was sae fain.
- 1892, Clarke Tum Fowt Sketches, page 40, no. 3:
- T'poor pig what had just scrawled through t'bottom o' t'cart,
- 1896, Francis Hindes Groome, Kriegspiel: The War Game, page 252:
- 'Cut its throat,' I calls to him, but he didn't, just slashes its forepaw; but it dropt di-rekly, couldn't hardly scrawl out on the bank.'
- November 9, 1550, Hugh Latimer, A Sermon preached at Stamford:
References
“scrawl”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
Anagrams
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