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Definition of Pingle
1. n. A small piece of inclosed ground.
Definition of Pingle
1. Noun. (obsolete UK dialect) A small piece of enclosed ground. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Pingle
1. to strive [v PINGLED, PINGLING, PINGLES] - See also: strive
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pingle
Literary usage of Pingle
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Abstracts of Somersetshire Wills, Etc.: Copied from the Manuscript by Frederick Arthur Crisp, Frederick Brown (1888)
"... Esqr. My cousin Cyprian pingle. Lands in Milverton. My daughter Ann Lucar.
My cousin Emmanuel Lucar, ..."
2. Fulham Old and New: Being an Exhaustive History of the Ancient Parish of Fulham by Charles James Feret (1900)
"East of the Warren was a wood known as the Cope or Coope, the pingle, The Coope
or the Coope and pingle, f containing seventeen acres. and ..."
3. An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: To which is Prefixed, a by John Jamieson (1880)
"Difficulty, S. " WM a pingle, with a difficulty, with much ado," Rudd. ...
pingle, PINOLE-PAN, ». "A small tin- made goblet, with a long handle, ..."
4. The History of the Drainage of the Great Level of the Fens, Called Bedford by Samuel Wells (1830)
"... the river south ; and the Great pingle west 424 0 Other severalls adjoyning
more north, ... 325 0 A severall more west, called the pingle, by the said ..."
5. A Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language ...: Supplement by John Jamieson (1825)
"I never saw sic fike About a pingle—tak it gin ye like— Or gin ye ... 429- The
pingle-pan Is on the ingle set ; into the flood Of firey frith the ..."
6. Abstracts of Somersetshire Wills, Etc.: Copied from the Manuscript by Frederick Arthur Crisp, Frederick Brown (1888)
"... Esqr. My cousin Cyprian pingle. Lands in Milverton. My daughter Ann Lucar.
My cousin Emmanuel Lucar, ..."
7. Fulham Old and New: Being an Exhaustive History of the Ancient Parish of Fulham by Charles James Feret (1900)
"East of the Warren was a wood known as the Cope or Coope, the pingle, The Coope
or the Coope and pingle, f containing seventeen acres. and ..."
8. An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: To which is Prefixed, a by John Jamieson (1880)
"Difficulty, S. " WM a pingle, with a difficulty, with much ado," Rudd. ...
pingle, PINOLE-PAN, ». "A small tin- made goblet, with a long handle, ..."
9. The History of the Drainage of the Great Level of the Fens, Called Bedford by Samuel Wells (1830)
"... the river south ; and the Great pingle west 424 0 Other severalls adjoyning
more north, ... 325 0 A severall more west, called the pingle, by the said ..."
10. A Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language ...: Supplement by John Jamieson (1825)
"I never saw sic fike About a pingle—tak it gin ye like— Or gin ye ... 429- The
pingle-pan Is on the ingle set ; into the flood Of firey frith the ..."