seagull
nounEtymology
From sea + gull. The second element is from a Brythonic language. Compare Welsh gwylan, Breton gouelan.
- derived from *wailannā✻
- derived from *gwuɨlann✻
- inherited from gulle
Definitions
Any of several white, often dark-backed birds of the family Laridae having long, pointed…
Any of several white, often dark-backed birds of the family Laridae having long, pointed wings and short legs.
- And while there are plenty of benches, there's little shelter from the wind (or predatory seagulls the size of dogs) out on the platforms.
The symbol ̼, which combines under a letter as a sort of accent.
A fan or member of Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club.
›+ 5 more definitionsshow fewer
To run in the back line rather than concentrate on primary positional duties in open play.
- […] and when you need cover for the fullback because of the bombs raining down, when the walking maul requires every forward to quit seagulling and actually do some hard graft, then the rest of the game opens up.
- On hand was seagulling number eight Dave Hodges to cross for the all-important try.
- That occurred in the 12th minute when flanker George Smith, seagulling out wide, enjoyed the rewards of a two-man overlap to score.
To use a British Seagull outboard.
- It should be considered a style of outboarding I believe. Seagulling arround^([sic]) and all.
To work as a non-union casual stevedore.
- Bill had been seagulling on the wharf since he got back from the war.
- At that time many of them seagulled on the Mt Maunganui wharf to make a crust in order to carry on with their ideal of kiwifruit as a major exporting industry.
- The only stories he told of his life were of how hard he had worked, seagulling on the wharf, standing in blood and guts at the Works, loading trucks with sacks of fertiliser and grain at the Farmers' Co-op.
A surname
Someone connected with Brighton & Hove Albion Football Club, as a fan, player, coach etc.
The neighborhood
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for seagull. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA