swill
/swɪl/
swill
English
Noun Top 29,246
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Definition
A mixture of solid and liquid food scraps fed to pigs etc; especially kitchen waste for this purpose.
Etymology
From Middle English swilen (“to wash; swirl; wash away”), from Old English swillan, swilian (“to wash; wash down; swill; gargle”), from Proto-West Germanic *swilljan, from Proto-Germanic *swiljaną (“to gulp, swallow”), from Proto-Indo-European *swel- (“to drink, gulp, swallow”). Related to swallow.
Example Sentences
- "I cannot believe anyone could drink this swill."
- "This new TV show is a worthless load of swill."
- "They have helped foster a corrosive, mean-spirited, angry and divisive atmosphere that May and her lieutenants are too weak to challenge. Into this swill comes Leave financier-in-chief, Arron Banks, who last week announced he was setting up a “Patriotic Alliance” to attempt to unseat 100 Remain-supporting MPs."
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