abseiling

English

Verb

abseiling

  1. present participle and gerund of abseil

Noun

abseiling (countable and uncountable, plural abseilings)

  1. The process or act of abseiling.
    • 1977, The New Yorker, page 33:
      He pictured the abseiling, literally a flight down the mountain on the doubled cord of his long rope, and he thought that those hours speeding down the cliffs would be the finest of his life.
    • 1995, New Scientist - Volume 145, page 40:
      Greenpeace offers its supporters the chance to fund brave and glamorous adventures (inflatables pitted against whalers; abseilings against smokestacks), and in exchange to wear something very like the medieval pilgrim's token: to put a rainbow sticker in their car windows.
    • 2004, Marc Dubin, The Rough Guide to the Pyrenees, →ISBN, page 464:
      Moderate ravines, with some drops requiring rope or prolonged swims, include Oscuros de Balce/s, Estrechos de Balce/s and Gorgoncho/n, all close to Bierge, while experts-only abysses above Rodellar include Gorgas Negras, Otin and Mascu/n Superior, all involving thirty-metre abseilings and strenuous clambering.
    • 2013, Marie Brennan, A Natural History of Dragons: A Memoir by Lady Trent, →ISBN, page 242:
      Between that and the abseiling, I think I left enough skin behind on those rocks to cover an entire second person.
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