shrill

English dictionary entry

Meanings

adj
  1. High-pitched and piercing.
  2. Having a shrill voice.
  3. Sharp or keen to the senses.
  4. Fierce, loud, strident.
verb
  1. To make a shrill noise.
noun
  1. A shrill sound.

Pronunciation

/ʃɹɪl/ En-us-shrill.ogg En-au-shrill.ogg

Word forms

shrill shriller shrillest shrills shrilling shrilled

Etymology

From Late Middle English schrille, shirle, shrille (“of a sound: high-pitched, piercing; producing such a sound”), possibly from the earlier shil, schille (“loud, resounding; high-pitched”), from Old English sċill (“sonorous sounding”), of Germanic origin and probably ultimately imitative. The r in the word was introduced by analogy to Middle English skrīke, skrīken, scrēmen, possibly to avoid confusion with non-Anglian forms of schelle (modern English shell) where Old English sċill (“sonorous sounding”) and sċill (“shell”) existed. The word is cognate with Icelandic skella (“crash, bang, slam”), Low German schrell (“sharp in taste or tone”).

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