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 /
Archaic.

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
  1. 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
  2. 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)

trill 2
/ (trɪl) /

verb, noun

an archaic or poetic word for trickle

Word Origin for trill

C14: probably of Scandinavian origin; related to Norwegian trilla to roll; see trill 1