English edit

Etymology edit

From Rawlplug (a trademark); from the name of the original inventor, John Joseph Rawlings, and plug.

Noun edit

rawl plug (plural rawl plugs)

  1. A wall plug; a screw anchor.
    • 1983, David Plante, Difficult women: a memoir of three:
      After a large lunch in her kitchen, she showed me up to the bathroom with the collapsing shelf. She had bought a box of rawl plugs []
    • 2006, John Gregory Betancourt, Sean Wallace, Horror: The Best of the Year, 2006 Edition:
      In the morning, Mark found himself up a ladder in the hall with a drill, a pocketful of Rawl plugs and a mouthful of language.
    • 2002, Barbara Houseman, Finding your voice: a step-by-step guide for actors:
      Andrew Wade, the Head of Voice at the RSC, had the brilliant idea of using the small plastic tubes you can buy in DIY shops, to cut up and use as rawl plugs []