Idioms for pearl
cast pearls before swine,
to offer or give something of great value to those incapable of appreciating it: She read them Shakespeare but it was casting pearls before swine.
Origin of pearl
1
1300–50; Middle English
perle < Middle French < Italian or assumed Vulgar Latin
*perla (> German
Perle, Old English
pærl), for Latin
*pernula (> Portuguese
perola, perhaps Old Saxon
përula), diminutive of Latin
perna sea mussel
OTHER WORDS FROM pearl
pearl·er, noun pearl·ish, adjective pearl·like, adjectiveWords nearby pearl
pear,
pear haw,
pear psylla,
pear thrips,
pear-shaped,
pearl,
pearl ash,
pearl barley,
pearl blue,
pearl city,
pearl danio
Definition for pearl (2 of 4)
Definition for pearl (3 of 4)
Pearl
[ purl ]
/ pɜrl /
noun
a town in central Mississippi.
a female given name.
Definition for pearl (4 of 4)
purl
1
or pearl
[ purl ]
/ pɜrl /
verb (used with or without object)
to knit with a reverse stitch.
to finish with loops or a looped edging.
noun
a basic stitch in knitting, the reverse of the knit, formed by pulling a loop of the working yarn back through an existing stitch and then slipping that stitch off the needle.
Compare knit(def 11).
one of a series of small loops along the edge of lace braid.
thread made of twisted gold or silver wire.
Origin of purl
1
First recorded in 1520–30; variant of obsolete or dial.
pirl to twist (threads, etc.) into a cord
Example sentences from the Web for pearl
British Dictionary definitions for pearl (1 of 4)
pearl
1
/ (pɜːl) /
noun
adjective
of, made of, or set with pearl or mother-of-pearl
having the shape or colour of a pearl
verb
Word Origin for pearl
C14: from Old French, from Vulgar Latin
pernula (unattested), from Latin
perna sea mussel
British Dictionary definitions for pearl (2 of 4)
pearl
2
/ (pɜːl) /
noun, verb
a variant spelling of purl 1 (def. 2), purl 1 (def. 3), purl 1 (def. 5)
British Dictionary definitions for pearl (3 of 4)
purl
1
/ (pɜːl) /
noun
Also called: purl stitch
a knitting stitch made by doing a plain stitch backwards
a decorative border, as of lace
gold or silver wire thread
verb
to knit (a row or garment) in purl stitch
to edge (something) with a purl
Also (for senses 2, 3, 5):
pearl
Word Origin for purl
C16: from dialect
pirl to twist into a cord
British Dictionary definitions for pearl (4 of 4)
purl
2
/ (pɜːl) /
verb
(intr)
(of a stream, etc) to flow with a gentle curling or rippling movement and a murmuring sound
noun
a curling movement of water; eddy
a murmuring sound, as of a shallow stream
Word Origin for purl
C16: related to Norwegian
purla to bubble
Medical definitions for pearl
pearl
[ pûrl ]
n.
A small sphere of thin glass containing amyl nitrite or other volatile fluid, designed to be crushed, as in a handkerchief, so that its contents can be inhaled.
Any of a number of small tough masses of mucus occurring in the sputum in asthma.
Scientific definitions for pearl
pearl
[ pûrl ]
A smooth, slightly iridescent, white or grayish rounded growth inside the shells of some mollusks. Pearls form as a reaction to the presence of a foreign particle, and consist of thin layers of mother-of-pearl that are deposited around the particle. The pearls of oysters are often valued as gems.