First Known Use: 15th century
Dictionary
1moil
verb \ˈmȯi(-ə)l\
Definition of MOIL
transitive verb
chiefly dialect : to make wet or dirty
intransitive verb
1
: to work hard : drudge
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Origin of MOIL
Middle English mollen, moillen, from Anglo-French moiller, from Vulgar Latin *molliare, from Latin mollis soft — more at mollify
2moil
noun
Definition of MOIL
1
: hard work : drudgery
First Known Use of MOIL
1612
Related to MOIL
- Synonyms
- ado, alarums and excursions, ballyhoo, blather, bluster, bobbery, bother, bustle, clatter, clutter [chiefly dialect], coil, corroboree [Australian], disturbance, do [chiefly dialect], foofaraw, fun, furor, furore, fuss, helter-skelter, hoo-ha (also hoo-hah), hoopla, hubble-bubble, hubbub, hullabaloo, hurly, hurly-burly, hurricane, hurry, hurry-scurry (or hurry-skurry), kerfuffle [chiefly British], commotion, pandemonium, pother, row, ruckus, ruction, rumpus, shindy, splore [Scottish], squall, stew, stir, storm, to-do, tumult, turmoil, uproar, welter, whirl, williwaw, zoo
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