COBBLE


Meaning of COBBLE in English

I. ˈkäbəl transitive verb

( cobbled ; cobbled ; cobbling -b(ə)liŋ ; cobbles )

Etymology: Middle English coblen, perhaps back-formation from cobelere cobbler

1. Britain : to mend, patch, or repair coarsely or roughly

any holes he would cobble with sack-needle and string — Adrian Bell

2.

a. : mend , repair

b. : make

cobbled shoes

3. : to make or put together roughly, clumsily or hastily often in a temporary or improvised fashion — often used with up

II. noun

( -s )

: a cobbled place : a coarse mending

III. noun

( -s )

Etymology: back-formation from cobblestone

1.

a. : a naturally rounded stone larger than a pebble and smaller than a boulder often arbitrarily limited by geologists to a size ranging from 64 to 256 millimeters in diameter

b. : such a stone used in paving a street or in other construction

2. also cobble coal cobbles plural , chiefly Britain : lump coal about the size of small cobblestones

3. : a ball or piece of waste iron or steel

IV. transitive verb

: to pave with cobblestones

V. noun

( -s )

Etymology: perhaps from cobble (III)

Northeast : a rounded hill usually of moderate elevation

VI. noun

( -s )

Etymology: perhaps from cob (III) (swan) + -le (diminutive suffix)

: a common loon ( Gavia immer ) ; also : red-throated loon

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.