[
US
/ˈɹɪɫ/
]
[ UK /ɹˈɪl/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈɪl/ ]
NOUN
- a small stream
- a small channel (as one formed by soil erosion)
How To Use rill In A Sentence
- It's not bad but neither is it brilliant - which won't bother 99 per cent of buyers one jot as they are in it for the image.
- The captain's armband must have special powers because he's been brilliant. Times, Sunday Times
- A few talented writers en dowed with originality and exceptional animation, a few brilliant efforts, isolated, without following, interrupted and recommenced, did not suffice to endow a nation with a solid and imposing basis of literary wealth. Literary and Philosophical Essays: French, German and Italian
- Having drop-dead gorgeous, private, windowed offices makes it a lot easier to recruit the kinds of superstars that produce ten times as much as the merely brilliant software developers.
- Once the thrill of its discovery had passed, Peter got onto the business of exploring the place a little better.
- Defensive tackle is a bit more of a crapshoot, but the one thing they must make sure of is that whomever they take has a brilliant mind.
- Urban guerrillas detonated a car bomb in front of the company's headquarters.
- Another friend notes a shift in the type of gifts given at wedding showers, a reversion to 1950s-style offerings: soup ladles and frilly aprons are being unwrapped along with see-through nighties and push-up bras.
- Because wheat emerges so quickly, weeds must be killed before drilling using tillage or contact herbicides.
- But, fortunately, there were cavities in the two teeth on either side of the gap -- one in the first molar and one in the palatine surface of the cuspid; might he not drill a socket in the remaining root and sockets in the molar and cuspid, and, partly by bridging, partly by crowning, fill in the gap? McTeague