Roll
English Meaning
To cause to revolve by turning over and over; to move by turning on an axis; to impel forward by causing to turn over and over on a supporting surface; as, to roll a wheel, a ball, or a barrel.
- To move forward along a surface by revolving on an axis or by repeatedly turning over.
- To travel or be moved on wheels or rollers: rolled down the sidewalk on their scooters.
- To travel around; wander: roll from town to town.
- To travel or be carried in a vehicle.
- To be carried on a stream: The logs rolled down the cascading river.
- To start to move or operate: The press wouldn't roll.
- To work or succeed in a sustained way; gain momentum: The political campaign finally began to roll.
- To go by; elapse: The days rolled along.
- To recur. Often used with around: Summer has rolled around again.
- To move in a periodic revolution, as a planet in its orbit.
- To turn over and over: The puppy rolled in the mud.
- To shift the gaze usually quickly and continually: The child's eyes rolled with fright.
- To turn around or revolve on or as if on an axis.
- To move or advance with a rising and falling motion; undulate: The waves rolled toward shore.
- To extend or appear to extend in gentle rises and falls: The dunes roll to the sea.
- To move or rock from side to side: The ship pitched and rolled in heavy seas.
- To walk with a swaying, unsteady motion.
- To take the shape of a ball or cylinder: Yarn rolls easily.
- To become flattened by or as if by pressure applied by a roller.
- To make a deep, prolonged, surging sound: Thunder rolled in the distance.
- To make a sustained trilling sound, as certain birds do.
- To beat a drum in a continuous series of short blows.
- To pour or flow in or as if in a continual stream: tourists rolling into the city.
- To enjoy ample amounts: rolled in the money.
- To cause to move forward along a surface by revolving on an axis or by repeatedly turning over.
- To move or push along on wheels or rollers: rolled the plane out of the hangar.
- To impel or send onward in a steady, swelling motion: The sea rolls its waves onto the sand.
- To impart a swaying, rocking motion to: Heavy seas rolled the ship.
- To turn around or partly turn around; rotate: rolled his head toward the door.
- To cause to begin moving or operating: roll the cameras; roll the presses.
- To extend or lay out: rolled out a long rope.
- To pronounce or utter with a trill: You must roll your r's in Spanish.
- To utter or emit in full, swelling tones.
- To beat (a drum) with a continuous series of short blows.
- To wrap (something) round and round upon itself or around something else: roll up a poster.
- To envelop or enfold in a covering: roll dirty laundry in a sheet.
- To make by shaping into a ball or cylinder: roll a cigarette.
- To spread, compress, or flatten by applying pressure with a roller: roll pastry dough.
- Printing To apply ink to (type) with a roller or rollers.
- Games To throw (dice), as in craps.
- Slang To rob (a drunken, sleeping, or otherwise helpless person).
- The act or an instance of rolling.
- Something rolled up: a roll of tape.
- A quantity, as of cloth or wallpaper, rolled into a cylinder and often considered as a unit of measure.
- A piece of parchment or paper that may be or is rolled up; a scroll.
- A register or a catalogue.
- A list of names of persons belonging to a group.
- A mass in cylindrical or rounded form: a roll of tobacco.
- A small rounded portion of bread.
- A portion of food shaped like a tube with a filling.
- A rolling, swaying, or rocking motion.
- A gentle swell or undulation of a surface: the roll of the plains.
- A deep reverberation or rumble: the roll of thunder.
- A rapid succession of short sounds: the roll of a drum.
- A trill: the roll of his r's.
- A resonant, rhythmical flow of words.
- A roller, especially a cylinder on which to roll something up or with which to flatten something.
- A maneuver in which an airplane makes a single complete rotation about its longitudinal axis without changing direction or losing altitude.
- Slang Money, especially a wad of paper money.
- roll back To reduce (prices or wages, for example) to a previous lower level.
- roll back To cause to turn back or retreat.
- roll out To get out of bed.
- roll out Football To execute a rollout.
- roll over To defer or postpone payment of (an obligation).
- roll over To renegotiate the terms of (a financial deal).
- roll over To reinvest (funds from a maturing security or from a tax-deferred account) into a similar security or account.
- roll up To arrive in a vehicle.
- roll up To accumulate; amass: rolled up quite a fortune.
- on a roll Informal Undergoing or experiencing sustained, even increasing good fortune or success: "The stock market's on a roll” ( Karen Pennar).
- roll in the hay Slang Sexual intercourse.
- roll the bones Games To cast dice, especially in craps.
- roll with the punches Slang To cope with and withstand adversity, especially by being flexible.