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Definition of Roller skate
1. Verb. Travel on shoes with steel or rubber rollers attached to their soles. "In some fashionable restaurants, the waiters roller skate around"
2. Noun. A shoe with pairs of rollers fixed to the sole.
Definition of Roller skate
1. Noun. A boot having small wheels or casters attached to its sole; used for roller skating ¹
2. Verb. To skate using roller skates ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Roller Skate
Literary usage of Roller skate
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"roller skate, a skate patented in France as early as 1819. Since that time scarcely
a year has passed without the recording of some improvement in wheel ..."
2. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"roller skate, a skate patented in France as early as 1819. Since that time scarcely
a year has passed without the recording of some improvement in wheel ..."
3. The Americana: A Universal Reference Library, Comprising the Arts and ...by Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines by Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines (1912)
"roller skate, a skate patented in France as early as 1819. Since that time scarcely
a year has passed without the recording of some improvement in wheel ..."
4. Belgravia by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1880)
"In 1823 there was a roller-skate exhibition in the old Tennis Court in ...
has often been set down as the first roller-skate ; but all that can be said for ..."
5. A Handy Book of Curious Information: Comprising Strange Happenings in the by William Shepard Walsh (1913)
"lds of papier-mache or canvas canyons. Roller-skate. The first roller-skate seems
to have l>een patented in 1823 by one Tvers, a fruiterer in ..."
6. A Handy Book of Curious Information: Comprising Strange Happenings in the by William Shepard Walsh (1913)
"Roller-skate. The first roller-skate seems to have been patented in 1823 by one
Tyers, a fruiterer in Picadilly, London. Other patents of a similar kind ..."