Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Noodle
Webster 1828 Edition
Noodle
NOO'DLE
,Noun.
Definition 2024
noodle
noodle
English
Noun
noodle (plural noodles)
- (chiefly in the plural) A string or strip of pasta.
- She slurped a long noodle up out of her soup.
- (colloquial, dated) A person with poor judgement; a fool.
- Sydney Smith
- the chuckling grin of noodles
- Charles Dickens, Hard Times
- If that portrait could speak, sir — but it has the advantage over the original of not possessing the power of committing itself and disgusting others, — it would testify, that a long period has elapsed since I first habitually addressed it as the picture of a noodle.
- Sydney Smith
- (colloquial) The brain, the head.
- (colloquial) A pool noodle.
Usage notes
In British English, noodle is chiefly used to describe Asian-style products comprising long, thin strands of dough. In American English, noodle can also refer to a range of European-style products which in British English would only be referred to as pasta.[3]
Quotations
For usage examples of this term, see Citations:noodle.
Derived terms
Derived terms
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Translations
string or strip of pasta
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fool — see fool
the brain, the head
See also
- pasta
- Wikisaurus:noodle
Verb
noodle (third-person singular simple present noodles, present participle noodling, simple past and past participle noodled)
- To think or ponder.
- He noodled over the problem for a day or two before making a decision.
- "Noodle that thought around for a while" said Dr. Johnson to his Biblical Interpretations class
- To fiddle, play with, or mess around.
- If the machine is really broken, noodling with the knobs is not going to fix it.
- To improvise music.
- He has been noodling with that trumpet all afternoon, and every bit of it sounds awful.
- (fishing) To fish (usually for very large catfish) without any equipment other than the fisherman's own body
- Fred had several lacerations on his hands from noodling for flathead in the river.
- (Australia) To fossick, especially for opals.
- 1989, Association for Industrial Archaeology, Industrial archaeology review, Volume 12,
- On the Olympic Field the tour-group is permitted to ‘noodle’ (hunt for opals) on the waste or mullock heaps ...
- 1994, RonMoon, Outback Australia: a Lonely Planet Australia guide,
- In Coober Pedy, noodling for opals is generally discouraged, although a few tourist spots, such as the Old Timers Mine, have noodle pits open to the public.
- 2006, Marele Day, Susan Bradley Smith, Fay Knight (editors), Making Waves: 10 Years of the Byron Bay Writers Festival ,
- We learn how Lennon used to noodle (fossick) for opal as a kid, how camels were for a long time the only form of transportation, and where the name 'Coober Pedy' came from.
- 1989, Association for Industrial Archaeology, Industrial archaeology review, Volume 12,
Derived terms
References
- ↑ https://books.google.be/books?id=qIsDdUSYJMIC
- ↑ "noodle", entry on Online Etymology Dictionary]
- ↑ August 12, 2015, Lynne Murphy, Noodles, Separated by a Common Language