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Webster 1913 Edition


Swale

Swale

,
Noun.
[Cf. Icel.
svalr
cool,
svala
to cool.]
A valley or low place; a tract of low, and usually wet, land; a moor; a fen.
[Prov. Eng. & Local, U.S.]

Swale

,
Verb.
I.
&
T.
To melt and waste away; to singe. See
Sweal
,
Verb.

Swale

,
Noun.
A gutter in a candle.
[Prov. Eng.]

Webster 1828 Edition


Swale

SWALE

,
Noun.
[probably from vale.] A local word in New England, signifying an interval or vale; a tract of low land.
1.
In England, a shade.

SWALE

,
Verb.
I.
To waste. [See Sweal.]

SWALE

,
Verb.
T.
To dress a hog for bacon, by singeing or burning off his hair. [Local.]

Definition 2024


swale

swale

See also: Swale

English

Noun

swale (plural swales)

  1. A low tract of moist or marshy land.
  2. A long narrow and shallow trough between ridges on a beach, running parallel to the coastline.
  3. A shallow troughlike depression that's created to carry water during rainstorms or snow melts; a drainage ditch.
  4. A shallow, usually grassy depression sloping downward from a plains upland meadow or level vegetated ridgetop.
    • 1912, Zane Grey, Riders of the Purple Sage, Chapter 6
      Jane climbed a few more paces behind him and then peeped over the ridge. Just beyond began a shallow swale that deepened and widened into a valley, and then swung to the left.
  5. A shallow trough dug into the land on contour (horizontally with no slope). Its purpose being to allow water time to percolate into the soil.
Translations

Etymology 2

See sweal.

Noun

swale (plural swales)

  1. (Britain, dialect) A gutter in a candle.

Verb

swale (third-person singular simple present swales, present participle swaling, simple past and past participle swaled)

  1. Alternative form of sweal (melt and waste away, or singe)

Anagrams