- rootle
- intransitive verb (rootled; rootling) Etymology: frequentative of 3root Date: 1809 root III
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
rootle — [ro͞ot′ l] vi. rootled, rootling Brit. ROOT2 (vi. 1 & 2) * * * … Universalium
rootle — [ro͞ot′ l] vi. rootled, rootling Brit. ROOT2 (vi. 1 & 2) … English World dictionary
rootle — root|le [ˈru:tl] v also rootle around/about [i]BrE informal to search for something by moving many other things around >rootle n [singular] … Dictionary of contemporary English
rootle — UK [ˈruːt(ə)l] / US [ˈrut(ə)l] verb [intransitive] Word forms rootle : present tense I/you/we/they rootle he/she/it rootles present participle rootling past tense rootled past participle rootled British informal to search by moving things around… … English dictionary
rootle — also rootle around/about verb (I) BrE informal to search for something by moving many other things around … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
rootle — verb (of an animal) to dig into the ground, with the snout Once, presumably, this quadrangle with its smooth lawns, its massive buildings, and the chapel itself was marsh too, where the grasses waved and the swine rootled … Wiktionary
rootle — verb Brit. informal term for root2. Origin C19: frequentative of root2 … English new terms dictionary
rootle — roo·tle … English syllables
rootle — /ˈrutəl/ (say roohtuhl) verb (i) (rootled, rootling) to root or grub; rummage. {root2 + le} …
rootle — v.intr. & tr. Brit. = ROOT(2) 1, 2. Etymology: ROOT(2) … Useful english dictionary