Bale
Pronunciation
- IPA: /beɪ̯l/, ˈbeɪ̯(ə)ɫ, beə̯ɫ
- Rhymes: -eɪl
- Homophones: bail
Origin 1
Old English bealo, from Proto-Germanic *balwô. Cognate with Gothic ðŒ±ðŒ°ðŒ»ð…ðŒ´ðŒ¹ðŒ½ðƒ (balweins, "torture"), Old High German balo ("destruction"), Old Norse bÇ«l ("disaster").
Full definition of bale
Noun
bale
(uncountable)- Evil, especially considered as an active force for destruction or death.
- Suffering, woe, torment.
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, VI.7:That other swayne, like ashes deadly pale,
Lay in the lap of death, rewing his wretched bale.
Derived terms
Origin 2
Old English bÇ£l, from Proto-Germanic *bÄ“lÅ, from Proto-Indo-European. Cognate with Old Norse bál (which may have been the direct source for the English word).
Noun
bale
(plural bales)- (obsolete) A large fire, a conflagration or bonfire.
- (archaic) A funeral pyre.
- (archaic) A beacon-fire.
Origin 3
Precise derivation uncertain: perhaps from Old French bale, balle, from Medieval Latin balla ("ball, rounded package"), from ; or perhaps from Dutch baal, itself borrowed from French.
Noun
bale
(plural bales)Derived terms
Verb
- (transitive) To wrap into a bale.
Origin 4
Alternative spelling of bail