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Tirled

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He tirléd at the pin. He twiddled or rattled with the latch before opening the door. Guillaume di Lorris, in his Romance of the Rose (thirteenth century), says, “When persons visit a friend they ought not to bounce all at once into the room, but should announce their approach by a slight cough, or few words spoken in the hall, or a slight shuffling of their feet, so as not to take their friends unawares.” The pin is the door-latch, and before a visitor entered a room it was, in Scotland, thought good manners to fumble at the latch to give notice of your intention to enter. (Tirl is the Anglo-Saxon thwer-an, to turn; Dutch dwarlen, our twirl, etc.; or Danish trille, German triller, Welsh treillio; our trill, to rattle or roll.)

1


“Right quick he mounted up the stair,

And tirled at the pin.”


Charlie is my Darling.

 

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

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Tiphany
Tiphys
Tipperary Rifle (A)
Tippling Act (The)
Tippling House
Tipstaff
Tiptoe of Expectation (On the)
Tirer une Dent
Tiresias
Tiring Irons
Tirled
Tironian Sign (The)
Tiryns
Tirynthian Swain
Tit
Tit for Tat
Titan
Titan’s War with Jove (The)
Titania
Tithonus
Titi (Prince)