Trilling
[ tril-ing ]
/ ˈtrɪl ɪŋ /
noun
Lionel,1905–75,
U.S. critic and author.
Definition for trilling (2 of 3)
trill
1
[ tril ]
/ trɪl /
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
noun
Origin of trill
1
1635–45; < Italian
trillo quaver or warble in singing ≪ Germanic; compare Dutch
trillen to vibrate, late Middle English
trillen to shake or rock (something)
Definition for trilling (3 of 3)
trill
2
[ tril ]
/ trɪl /
verb (used without object)
to flow in a thin stream; trickle.
verb (used with object)
to cause to flow in a thin stream.
Origin of trill
2
1300–50; Middle English
trillen to make (something) turn, to roll, flow (said of tears, water) < Old Danish
trijlæ to roll (said, e.g., of tears and of a wheelbarrow); compare Norwegian
trille, Swedish
trilla. See
trill1
Example sentences from the Web for trilling
British Dictionary definitions for trilling (1 of 3)
Trilling
/ (ˈtrɪlɪŋ) /
noun
Lionel . 1905–75, US literary critic, whose works include The Liberal Imagination (1950) and Sincerity and Authenticity (1974)
British Dictionary definitions for trilling (2 of 3)
trill
1
/ (trɪl) /
noun
music
a melodic ornament consisting of a rapid alternation between a principal note and the note a whole tone or semitone above it
Usual symbol: (written above a note) tr., tr
a shrill warbling sound, esp as made by some birds
phonetics
- the articulation of an (r) sound produced by holding the tip of the tongue close to the alveolar ridge, allowing the tongue to make a succession of taps against the ridge
- the production of a similar effect using the uvula against the back of the tongue
verb
to sound, sing, or play (a trill or with a trill)
(tr)
to pronounce (an (r) sound) by the production of a trill
Word Origin for trill
C17: from Italian
trillo, from
trillare, apparently from Middle Dutch
trillen to vibrate
British Dictionary definitions for trilling (3 of 3)
Word Origin for trill
C14: probably of Scandinavian origin; related to Norwegian
trilla to roll; see
trill
1