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Maul   /mɔl/   Listen
noun
Mall  n.  (Written also maul)  
1.
A large heavy wooden beetle; a mallet for driving anything with force; a maul.
2.
A heavy blow. (Obs.)
3.
An old game played with malls or mallets and balls. See Pall-mall.
4.
A place where the game of mall was played. Hence: A public walk; a level shaded walk. "Part of the area was laid out in gravel walks, and planted with elms; and these convenient and frequented walks obtained the name of the City Mall."



Maul  n.  (Written also mall)  A heavy wooden hammer or beetle.



verb
Maul  v. t.  (past & past part. mauled; pres. part. mauling)  
1.
To beat and bruise with a heavy stick or cudgel; to wound in a coarse manner. "Meek modern faith to murder, hack, and maul."
2.
To injure greatly; to do much harm to. "It mauls not only the person misrepreseted, but him also to whom he is misrepresented."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Maul" Quotes from Famous Books



... exists in France as Bruhiere and Brugere, is not derived from the Saxon briwan (to brew), but the French bruyere (heath), and is about tantamount to the German Plantagenet (broom plant). Miller is the old Norse melia, our mill and maul, and means ...
— The Romance of Names • Ernest Weekley

... pass through my hands. There was only one case of lion mauling, and that a Cape Boy who met a young half-grown cub on the road and unwisely ran from it. At first curiosity attracted this animal, and later the hunting instinct caused him to maul his prey. So they brought him in with the severe blood-poisoning that sets in in almost all cases of such a nature. For the teeth and claws of the larger carnivora are frightfully infectious. This Cape Boy died in forty-eight hours. Yet one other case ...
— Sketches of the East Africa Campaign • Robert Valentine Dolbey

... very desperate and damned. Now that pernicious and pestilent opinion of man's own righteousness, which will not be a sinner, unclean, miserable, and damnable, but righteous and holy, suffereth not God to come to his own natural and proper work. Therefore God must take this maul in hand (the law, I mean) to beat in pieces and bring to nothing this beast with her vain confidence, that she may so learn at length by her own misery that she is utterly forlorn and damned. But here lieth the difficulty, that when a man is terrified and cast down, he is so little ...
— The Varieties of Religious Experience • William James

... causes the rail to break in two at such points, which is liable to produce derailment and serious accident. Spike mauls should weigh not less than nine nor more than ten pounds, and should be on straight handles, not less than 3 ft. long. After considerable use, the face of the maul will become somewhat rounded, and when this takes place it should be sent to the shop to be redressed. The last blow on the spike should be only sufficiently hard to cause its throat to fit snugly on the rail; a harder blow will often fracture the spike in such a manner as ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 794, March 21, 1891 • Various

... band, which poured out from Murray's barracks, in Brattle Street, armed with clubs, cutlasses, and bayonets, provoked resistance, and a fray ensued. Ensign Maul, at the gate of the barrack yard, cried to the soldiers: "Turn out, and I will stand by you; kill them; stick them; knock them down; run your bayonets through them." One soldier after another leveled a firelock, and threatened to "make a lane" ...
— McGuffey's Fifth Eclectic Reader • William Holmes McGuffey


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