rootle
English
Etymology
Frequentative root + -le.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɹuːtəl/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- Rhymes: -uːtəl
Verb
rootle (third-person singular simple present rootles, present participle rootling, simple past and past participle rootled)
- (of an animal) to dig into the ground, with the snout.
- 2019 February 25, Christopher de Bellaigue, “The end of farming?”, in The Guardian:
- Removing internal fences allowed the wild Exmoor ponies and Tamworth pigs he introduced to browse and rootle over large distances, their disruptions creating habitats for other animals and plants.
- 1929, Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own, Penguin Books, paperback edition, page 11
- Once, presumably, this quadrangle with its smooth lawns, its massive buildings, and the chapel itself was marsh too, where the grasses waved and the swine rootled.
- (of a person) to search for something from a drawer, closet, etc.; to dig out.
- 2016, Kerry Greenwood, Murder and Mendelssohn, Sydney: Allen and Unwin, page 288:
- Bathed and changed, she rootled out Lambie from the bottom of her wardrobe.'
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