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    roil
    /rɔɪl/

    verb

    • 1. make (a liquid) turbid or muddy by disturbing the sediment: literary "winds roil these waters"
    • 2. make (someone) annoyed or irritated.

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  3. 4 meanings: 1. to make (a liquid) cloudy or turbid by stirring up dregs or sediment 2. (esp of a liquid) to be agitated or.... Click for more definitions.

    • Roiliest

      2 meanings: → See roily rare cloudy or muddy.... Click for...

  4. Oct 5, 2012 · Roil is a verb that means to make turbid by stirring up the sediment or dregs of, or to disturb, disorder, or rile. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related entries for roil.

  5. Roil means to make or be turbulent, muddy, or cloudy by stirring up sediment, or to cause or be agitated or upset. Learn the origin, synonyms, and examples of roil and its related words.

  6. To roil means to stir up or churn. A stormy ocean might roil, or even a restless crowd.

  7. roil something Winds often roil the sea here. (figurative) The collapse of the mortgage sector has roiled markets. The minister was accused of roiling the political waters. See roil in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

  8. All you need to know about "ROIL" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  9. The earliest known use of the verb roil is in the late 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for roil is from 1590, in the writing of John Greenwood, religious controversialist. roil is perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymons: roil v.1; roil v.2. See etymology.

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