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Coil   /kɔɪl/   Listen
Coil

noun
1.
A structure consisting of something wound in a continuous series of loops.  Synonyms: helix, spiral, volute, whorl.
2.
A round shape formed by a series of concentric circles (as formed by leaves or flower petals).  Synonyms: curl, curlicue, gyre, ringlet, roll, scroll, whorl.
3.
A transformer that supplies high voltage to spark plugs in a gasoline engine.
4.
A contraceptive device placed inside a woman's womb.
5.
Tubing that is wound in a spiral.
6.
Reactor consisting of a spiral of insulated wire that introduces inductance into a circuit.
verb
(past & past part. coiled; pres. part. coiling)
1.
To wind or move in a spiral course.  Synonyms: gyrate, spiral.  "Black smoke coiling up into the sky" , "The young people gyrated on the dance floor"
2.
Make without a potter's wheel.  Synonyms: hand-build, handbuild.
3.
Wind around something in coils or loops.  Synonyms: curl, loop.



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"Coil" Quotes from Famous Books



... art the fool!" she said, "who hast made all this coil, to wall up a poor cat in a cupboard, as it is thou who art the base knave and shameless pandar, who hast attempted to do murther, and all to sell thine own wife to a corrupt ...
— Graham's Magazine Vol XXXIII No. 3 September 1848 • Various

... a road which has not been lately used, and render it as impassable to horses as so many strains of barbed wire. When they merely escape from the undergrowth of wild ginger and tree-fern and stinging-bush, which fringes the scrub, and coil themselves in loose loops upon the ground, they are dangerous enough as traps for either man or horse. In the jungle, where they weave themselves in and out of the upright growths, they form a web which at times defies every engine ...
— A Dictionary of Austral English • Edward Morris

... heard of the things in those dismal gulfs, Like fiends that hemm'd him round— I would not lead a diver's life For every pearl that's found. And I've heard how the sea-snake, huge and dark, In the arctic flood doth roll; He hath coil'd his tail, like a cable strong, All round and round the pole: And they say, when he stirs in the sea below, The ice-rocks split asunder— The mountains huge of the ribbed ice— With a deafening crack like thunder. ...
— The World of Waters - A Peaceful Progress o'er the Unpathed Sea • Mrs. David Osborne

... on from one coil to another through the intestine, it naturally has more and more of its nourishing matter sucked out of it; until, by the time it reaches the last loop of the twenty feet of the small intestine, it has lost over two-thirds of ...
— A Handbook of Health • Woods Hutchinson

... staff-members, trying to communicate by words and gestures, while the children tried not to show disturbance at their vehemence. A cosmic-particle specialist told Soames the trouble. Among the children's possessions there was a coil of thread-fine copper wire. Somebody had snipped off a bit of it for test, and discovered that the wire was superconductive. A superconductor is a material which has no electrical resistance whatever. In current Earth science tin and mercury and a few ...
— Long Ago, Far Away • William Fitzgerald Jenkins AKA Murray Leinster


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