Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- intransitive verb To engage in boisterous merrymaking; revel noisily.
- intransitive verb To behave in a blustering manner; swagger.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To bluster; swagger; bully; be bold, noisy, vaunting, or turbulent.
- noun A rioter; a blusterer; a roisterer.
- noun [⟨ roister, verb] A drunken or riotous frolic; a spree.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun See
roisterer . - intransitive verb To bluster; to swagger; to bully; to be bold, noisy, vaunting, or turbulent.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb intransitive To engage in
noisy ,drunken , orriotous behavior. - verb intransitive To
walk with aswaying motion. - noun archaic A
roisterer .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- verb engage in boisterous, drunken merrymaking
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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I talked him out of it that time, and he got to workin 'on the Fish Patrol, runnin' down the very guys he used to roister around with.
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They keep inviting him out to hunt with them, to go drinking in the ale houses, to roister round the streets in masks, and he, nervously, declines.
The White Queen Philippa Gregory 2009
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They keep inviting him out to hunt with them, to go drinking in the ale houses, to roister round the streets in masks, and he, nervously, declines.
The White Queen Philippa Gregory 2009
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They keep inviting him out to hunt with them, to go drinking in the ale houses, to roister round the streets in masks, and he, nervously, declines.
The White Queen Philippa Gregory 2009
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Ay, you must know that my husband, he drank, loafed round the parish to roister and prate, wasted and trampled our gear under foot.
Peer Gynt 2008
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Ay, you must know that my husband, he drank, loafed round the parish to roister and prate, wasted and trampled our gear under foot.
Peer Gynt 2008
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Rome ran herself; as the man in charge, he could do precisely what he wanted, which was to roister.
Antony and Cleopatra Colleen McCullough 2007
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Rome ran herself; as the man in charge, he could do precisely what he wanted, which was to roister.
Antony and Cleopatra Colleen McCullough 2007
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They didn't pray and then roister on Midwinter's Day.
Bridge of the Separator Turtledove, Harry 2005
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Having fun with words can involve creative rhymes (“I do not roister with an oyster”) and nonce coinages (“my family was a scribacious lot”).
The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time William Safire 2004
qms commented on the word roister
When high tide arrives they get moister,
Then quahogs and cherrystones roister,
But twice-daily frolics
Of mud-dwelling mollusks
Are spurned by the dignified oyster.
June 9, 2018
bilby commented on the word roister
Sublime qms!
June 10, 2018
qms commented on the word roister
It would be shellfish of me to want more praise.
June 10, 2018
ry commented on the word roister
never thought I would like a piece of verse with the word 'moister' in it, but the conceit has now proven false.
June 12, 2018