birle
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Alternative forms ===
birl, byrl
=== Etymology ===
From Middle English birlen, from Old English byrelian (“to give or serve a drink to”), from byrele (“cupbearer, steward, butler”), from Proto-Germanic *burilijaz (“carrier, manservant”), from *burjô (“descendant, son”), from *beraną (“to bear, carry”). Related to Old English byre (“son, offspring, youth”). More at bear.
=== Verb ===
birle (third-person singular simple present birles, present participle birling, simple past and past participle birled)
(Scotland, obsolete) To pour a drink (for).
c.1882-1898, Francis James Child (collector and editor), Child's Ballads, Number 68: "Young Hunting",
She has birld in him Young Hunting / The good ale and the beer, / Till he was as fou drunken / As any wild-wood steer.
(Scotland, obsolete) To drink deeply or excessively; carouse.
c.1882-1898, Francis James Child (collector and editor), Child's Ballads, Number 73: "Lord Thomas and Fair Annet",
They birled, they birled at Annies[sic] wake / The white bread and the wine, / And ere the morn at that same time / At his they birled the same.
==== Derived terms ====
=== Anagrams ===
Erbil, Liber., liber, libre
== Spanish ==
=== Verb ===
birle
inflection of birlar:
first/third-person singular present subjunctive
third-person singular imperative