jeel
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English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Noun
[edit]jeel (plural jeels)
- Alternative form of jheel (“wetland area in India”)
- 1820, Walter Hamilton, A Geographical, Statistical, and Historical Description of Hindostan and the Adjacent Countries, volume 1, page 246:
- The pieces of stagnant water may be divided into jeels which contain water throughout the year, and chaongre which dry up in the cold season.
- 1827, East India Company, Journey across the Arracan Mountains: The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, volume 23, page 16:
- On the banks of this jeel the party encamped, about two miles from the village.
- 1827, The Burmese War: Operations on the Sihet Frontier, 1824: The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British India and Its Dependencies, volume 24, page 551:
- The reports of some hircarrahs having induced a belief that a short passage might be discovered across the jeels from the Gogra towards Tilyn, Lieut. Fisher, of the Quarter-Master General's department, was despatched to reconnoitre the outlets from that river, accompanied by Lieut. Craigie and five sipahees, in two dingees.
- 1934, George Orwell, Burmese Days:
- There were snipe in countless myriads, and wild geese in flocks that rose from the jeel with a roar like a goods train crossing an iron bridge.
Etymology 2
[edit]From Manx jeeyl, jeeill ("damage"), cognate to Irish díobháil.
Noun
[edit]jeel
- (Isle of Man) Damage; harm.
- 1889, Thomas Edward Brown, The Manx Witch: And Other Poems, page 79:
- And the gel, you know, as freckened as freckened,
Because of coorse she navar reckoned
But Misthriss Banks could do the jeel 1
She was braggin she could, and she'd take and kneel
On her bended knees, and she'd cuss — the baste !
[…]
1 Damage.
- 1908, Cushag (Josephine Kermode), Eunys, Or the Dalby Maid, page 16:
- An' first an' last upon the flure, an' spinnin' at the wheel,
- But that strange silence on her still of what had done the jeel.
- 1924, Sophia Morrison, Edmund Goodwin, A vocabulary of the Anglo-Manx dialect,
- page 73, entry "Govvag":
- The jeel (damage) the govags is doin to the nets is urrov all marcy.
- page 188, entry "Traa-dy-liooar":
- An' the wan (one) that's doin all the jeel (damage) is wickad Traa-dy-liooar (Time-enough). (Cushag.)
- page 73, entry "Govvag":
Further reading
[edit]- William Dwight Whitney and Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1914), “jeel”, in The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the English Language, revised edition, volumes III (Hoop–O), New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
Saterland Frisian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old Frisian *jele, from Proto-West Germanic *gelu. Cognates include German gelb and West Frisian giel.
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]jeel (masculine jelen, feminine, plural or definite jele, comparative jeler, superlative jeelst)
References
[edit]Categories:
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- English terms borrowed from Manx
- English terms derived from Manx
- English nouns with unknown or uncertain plurals
- Manx English
- Saterland Frisian terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Saterland Frisian terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Saterland Frisian terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Saterland Frisian terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- Saterland Frisian terms inherited from Old Frisian
- Saterland Frisian terms derived from Old Frisian
- Saterland Frisian terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- Saterland Frisian terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- Saterland Frisian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Saterland Frisian/eːl
- Rhymes:Saterland Frisian/eːl/1 syllable
- Saterland Frisian lemmas
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