trilling
English edit
Pronunciation edit
- Rhymes: -ɪlɪŋ
Etymology 1 edit
Verb edit
trilling
- present participle and gerund of trill
Noun edit
trilling (plural trillings)
- The production of a trill sound.
- 1906, Jennie Brooks, “ways of the Kentucky Cardinal”, in Harper's Monthly Magazine, volume 112, number 670, page 627:
- It was pretty close quarters, but I had conversed with her at such length during the nest-building time, that she knew my voice and soon began to answer me in low trillings — trillings that could scarcely be heard — and turn her head to look at me in a friendly way.
- 1910, Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington:
- During the singing act these wing surfaces are moved rapidly on each other, producing the familiar strident trillings of midsummer.
Etymology 2 edit
Noun edit
trilling (plural trillings)
- (crystallography) A compound crystal consisting of three individuals.
- 1966, Geological Survey Professional Paper - Issues 509-510, page 55:
- Diametrically opposed rays of these stellate groups are of the same optical orientation and the twins are, therefore, trillings ( fig. 29 ).
- 1974, Mineral Digest, volumes 6-8, page 148:
- Chrysoberyl is orthorhombic in symmetry. Like many orthorhombic minerals, it readily forms an intergrowth with two other individual crystals to make trillings with six sides or, at least, V-shaped twins.
- 2013, Federico Olóriz, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, Advancing Research on Living and Fossil Cephalopods, page 235:
- In the embryonic stage, pseudohexagonal trillings resemble those of the post-embryonic stage (Figure 2D,E), and are 1 to 3 μm in diameter.
- (obsolete, rare) One of three offspring born at the same birth; a triplet.
- 1842, “Sweden as it is; Moral, Political and Statistical”, in The Foreign Quarterly Review, volume 28, number 55, page 449:
- Every 67th lying-in woman has twins, every 5333rd has trillings, and only every 150,000th has fourlings.
- 1922, The Goat World, Devoted to the Upbuilding of the Goat Industry, page 67:
- this breed is prominent for its remarkable fecundity and yield of milk; as a rule, this goat litters once a year and drops 2 kids; occasionally trillings and fourlings.
- 1926, Medicina fennica - Volumes 1-5, page 14:
- About twins and trillings.
Danish edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Norwegian trinnling, from Old Norse þrennr (“triple”). Ultimately from the root of tre (“three”).
Noun edit
trilling
Declension edit
Declension of trilling
common gender |
Singular | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | trilling | trillingen | trillinger | trillingerne |
genitive | trillings | trillingens | trillingers | trillingernes |
Dutch edit
Etymology edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
trilling f (plural trillingen, diminutive trillinkje n)
Synonyms edit
Norwegian Nynorsk edit
Etymology edit
From trinnling.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
trilling m (definite singular trillingen, indefinite plural trillingar, definite plural trillingane)
- triplet (one of three siblings born at the same time of the same mother)
References edit
- “trilling” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Swedish edit
Etymology edit
From earlier tri (“three”), from Old Swedish þrir.
Noun edit
trilling c
- a triplet
Declension edit
Declension of trilling | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | trilling | trillingen | trillingar | trillingarna |
Genitive | trillings | trillingens | trillingars | trillingarnas |