Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A building equipped with machinery for grinding grain into flour or meal.
- noun A device or mechanism that grinds grain.
- noun A building or farm equipped with machinery that presses or grinds fruit to extract the juice.
- noun A device or machine used to extract juice from fruit.
- noun A machine or device that reduces a solid or coarse substance into pulp or minute grains by crushing, grinding, or pressing.
- noun A building or group of buildings equipped with machinery for processing raw materials into finished or industrial products.
- noun A machine, such as one for stamping coins, that produces something by the repetition of a simple process.
- noun A steel roller bearing a raised design, used for making a die or a printing plate by pressure.
- noun Any of various machines for shaping, cutting, polishing, or dressing metal surfaces.
- noun A process, agency, or institution that operates in a mechanical way or turns out products in the manner of a factory.
- noun A business that breeds and sells animals, such as purebred puppies, often in substandard conditions. Often used in combination.
- noun A difficult or laborious series of experiences.
- intransitive verb To grind, pulverize, or break down into smaller particles in a mill.
- intransitive verb To produce or process mechanically in a mill.
- intransitive verb To cut, shape, or finish in a mill or with a milling tool.
- intransitive verb To produce a ridge around the edge of (a coin).
- intransitive verb To groove or flute the rim of (a coin or other metal object).
- intransitive verb Western US To cause (cattle) to move in a circle or tightening spiral in order to stop a stampede.
- intransitive verb To move around in churning confusion.
- intransitive verb Slang To fight with the fists; box.
- intransitive verb To undergo milling.
- noun A unit of currency equal to 1/1000 of a US dollar or 1/10 of a cent.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun One thousandth part of anything; especially, in the monetary system of the United States, one thousandth of a dollar, or one tenth of a cent.
- noun Millet.
- To steal.
- In sugar manufacturing, to pass (sugarcane) through a cane-mill. See
sugar-mill . - noun In leather manufacturing, an arrangement consisting of one or two large stone rollers which revolve vertically in a pit.
- noun The raised or ridged edge or flange made in milling, stamping, rolling, or pressing anything, as a coin or a screw.
- noun The entire plant for producing merchant bars and shapes, including the buildings, boilers, engines, mills, and accessories.
- To grind in a mill; grind; reduce to fine particles or to small pieces by grinding or other means. See
milling . - To subject to the mechanical operations carried on in a mill, as a saw-mill or planing-mill; shape or finish by machinery.
- To cut (metal) with a milling-tool in a milling-machine.
- To turn or upset the edge of (a coin) so as to produce a marginal ridge or flange on both sides, upon which, when laid flat, the coin rests, thus protecting the design which is inside of the flange from wear, and enabling the coins to lie firmly when piled together one upon another.
- To flute the edge of, as of a coin, or of any flat piece of metal, as the head of a milled screw or the rim of a metal box-cover, to afford a hold for the fingers.
- To tumble (leather) in a hollow revolving cylinder in contact with oil or any ameliorating or tanning liquid, whereby the liquid is worked into all parts of the leather.
- To throw, as undyed silk.
- To thicken by fulling; full (cloth), as in a fulling-mill.
- To yield, in the process of grinding or milling.
- To beat severely with the fists; fight.
- To cause to froth: as, to
mill chocolate. - To move in a circular direction around a central point or object in a purposeless manner: said of cattle in herding on the plains.
- To turn suddenly and change its course: said of a whale: as, the whale milled, and ran to leeward.
- noun A mechanical device for grinding grain for food.
- noun A machine for grinding or pulverizing any solid substance.
- noun A machine which transforms raw material by a process other than grinding into forms fit for uses to which the raw material is unfitted.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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However, in the absence of such an improvement, much may be done by care and attention at the mill; the green bands and trash which usually accompany the canes from the field, should, therefore, be carefully removed before they are passed through, as they contain no saccharine matter, abound in the deleterious substances already mentioned, and communicate a bad color to the juice; therefore, _the ripe cane only should pass through the mill_.
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"Some were like Evan's mill, _which was a gentlemanly mill_; it would go when it had nothing to do, but it refused to work."
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You have just said that its operations resemble those of a mill: could you not, as often as you require to speak of it, refer to it in the future as _the mill_? "
The Vicar's Daughter George MacDonald 1864
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We are going to make it Saturday afternoon so as to include the entire troop "(the term mill girl was studiously avoided)," and besides, "continued Margaret, glorying in the importance of her post," we may have the Venture Troop of Franklin with that pretty little leader, Rose Dixon.
The Girl Scout Pioneers or Winning the First B. C. Lilian Garis 1913
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The chapter in Inkspell where a mill is the scene of a dramatic confrontation depends on it.
Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » INTERVIEW: Anthea Bell, Part 1 2006
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They lived in what they call the mill hill, the houses real close together.
Oral History Interview with Eunice Austin, 1980 July 2. Interview H-107. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007). By Eunice Austin Eunice Austin 1980
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They lived in what they call the mill hill, the houses real close together.
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But those weasel phrases get tiresome after a while, and people do tend to gloss over them; and, hey, I'm always interested in finding more gnarly ideas to take apart and play with; so I thought that even if I am going to blather away with my own jazz riffs on what I understand Todorov or Clute to be saying -- to grab these basic themes wherever I find them, see if I can play them back by ear, and if they sound right run with that, rephrasing them and putting them through the conversions, inversions and reversions of my own twisty, turny logic -- well, more grist for the mill is always fun.
Freeform Critique Hal Duncan 2008
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But those weasel phrases get tiresome after a while, and people do tend to gloss over them; and, hey, I'm always interested in finding more gnarly ideas to take apart and play with; so I thought that even if I am going to blather away with my own jazz riffs on what I understand Todorov or Clute to be saying -- to grab these basic themes wherever I find them, see if I can play them back by ear, and if they sound right run with that, rephrasing them and putting them through the conversions, inversions and reversions of my own twisty, turny logic -- well, more grist for the mill is always fun.
Archive 2008-01-01 Hal Duncan 2008
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As the rumor-mill is running that the 11th Doctor will be an "old-soul with a young face", her perception may well be spot-on, from her point of view ... (btw - like I said above, just wild-surfing, so I probably will never see this post again, but just felt the need to comment ...)
Doctor Who Season Five Spoilers rabid1st 2009
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