• Rowel

    Pronunciation

    • IPA: /raÊŠÉ™l/
    • Rhymes: -əʊəl

    Origin

    From Old French roel, from Late Latin rotella, diminutive of Latin rota ("wheel").

    Full definition of rowel

    Noun

    rowel

    (plural rowels)
    1. The small spiked wheel on the end of a spur.
      • 1819, Walter Scott, , 1833, The Complete Works of Sir Walter Scott, Volume 3, page 121,The deep and sharp rowels with which Ivanhoe’s heels were now armed, began to make the worthy Prior repent of his courtesy,....
      • 1939, HHenry Miller, The Cosmological Eye, page 246,The dry desert of my native land, her men grey and gaunt, their spines twisted, their feet shod with rowel and spur.
      • 1973, Thomas Pynchon, 2013, , page 892,The Lone Ranger will storm in at the head of a posse, rowels tearing blood from the stallion’s white hide, to find his young friend, innocent Dan, swinging from a tree limb by a broken neck.
      • 1992, Cormac McCarthy, , page 62,He nodded at the Americans. Buena suerte, he said. He put the long rowels of his spurs to the horse and they moved on.
    2. A little flat ring or wheel on a horse's bit.
      • 1590, Edmund Spenser, , Book 1: Knight of the Red Cross, 1850, Edmund Spenser's Knight of the Red Cross; or Holiness, page 74,The iron rowels into frothy foam he bit.
    3. A roll of hair, silk, etc., passed through the flesh of a horse in the manner of a seton in human surgery.

    Verb

    1. (transitive) To use a rowel on something, especially to drain fluid.
    2. (transitive) To incite, to goad.
      • 1941, Thomas Bell (novelist), , page 240,He would have been completely ignorant of what was going on if Frank, periodically roweled by the viciously anti-labor stand of the Pittsburgh newspapers, hadn't felt the need of an audience.

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