izle
English
Etymology
From Old English ysel, ysle. Compare Old Norse usli.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈaɪzəl/; (dialectally also) IPA(key): /ˈizəl/, /ˈɪzəl/
- Rhymes: -aɪzəl
Noun
izle (plural izles)
- (dialectal) A spark, an ember, a hot ash or cinder.
- [1815, The Monthly Magazine, page 297:
- Izles, Dust or ashes from the fire. "The furniture is covered with izles."]
- 1880 (original 1810?), Robert Hartley Cromek, Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway Song, page 142:
- I hied me hame to my father's ha',
- My dear auld mither to see;
- But she lay ' mang the black izles
- Wi' the death-tear in her ee.
- 1922, Wilfrid Wilson Gibson, Krindlesyke, book II, "Bell Haggard", page 132:
- I've watched many fires / Since last I sat beside this hearth—good fires : / Coal, coke, and peat, but wood-fires in the main. / There's naught like izles for dancing flames and singing: / Birch kindles best, and has the liveliest flames : / […]
- 2010, Ben Tripp, Rise Again: A Zombie Thriller, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:
- […] smoke rolled up into the atmosphere, candescent at the skyline where the red flames leaped up inside it, dancing with bright izles that flared and winked out.
- [1815, The Monthly Magazine, page 297:
Anagrams
Turkish
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