english
See also: English
English
Etymology 1
Uncertain. It is speculated to relate either to people from England introducing the technique for billiards or bowling in the United States, or perhaps from a particular person with the surname English.[1]
Pronunciation
Noun
english (uncountable)
- (uncountable, Canada, US) Spinning or rotary motion given to a ball around the vertical axis, as in pool, billiards or bowling; spin, sidespin.
- You can't hit it directly, but maybe if you give it some english.
- 2005, S. Moran, Bronx Boy: Book One of The Zombie Island Trilogy, page 179:
- There was a magical way of putting English on the dice to result in a six.
- (by extension, figurative) An unusual or unexpected interpretation of a text or idea, a spin, a nuance.
Translations
spinning or rotary motion around the vertical axis
See also
Verb
english (third-person singular simple present englishes, present participle englishing, simple past and past participle englished)
- (transitive; archaic or rare) Alternative form of English.
- 1930, Kemp Malone, “The Terminology of Anglistics.”, in The English Journal, volume 19, number 8, →JSTOR, page 645:
- Eduard Sievers and his followers have, in recent years, raised the study of speech rhythm to the rank of a special science, which they call Schallanalyse, a name best englished as rhythmics.
References
- “english” under “English”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2008.
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