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rabble

1
[ rab-uhl ]
/ ˈræb əl /
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noun
a disorderly crowd; mob.
the rabble, the lower classes; the common people: The nobility held the rabble in complete contempt.
verb (used with object), rab·bled, rab·bling.
to beset as a rabble does; mob.
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Origin of rabble

1
1350–1400; Middle English rabel (noun), of uncertain origin

Other definitions for rabble (2 of 2)

rabble2
[ rab-uhl ]
/ ˈræb əl /
Metallurgy

noun
a tool or mechanically operated device used for stirring or mixing a charge in a roasting furnace.
verb (used with object), rab·bled, rab·bling.
to stir (a charge) in a roasting furnace.

Origin of rabble

2
1655–65; <French râble fire-shovel, tool, Middle French raable<Latin rutābulum implement for shifting hot coals, equivalent to *rutā(re) presumed frequentative of ruere to churn up, disturb + -bulum suffix of instrument

OTHER WORDS FROM rabble

rabbler, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

How to use rabble in a sentence

British Dictionary definitions for rabble (1 of 2)

rabble1
/ (ˈræbəl) /

noun
a disorderly crowd; mob
the rabble derogatory the common people

Word Origin for rabble

C14 (in the sense: a pack of animals): of uncertain origin; perhaps related to Middle Dutch rabbelen to chatter, rattle

British Dictionary definitions for rabble (2 of 2)

rabble2
/ (ˈræbəl) /

noun
Also called: rabbler an iron tool or mechanical device for stirring, mixing, or skimming a molten charge in a roasting furnace
verb
(tr) to stir, mix, or skim (the molten charge) in a roasting furnace

Word Origin for rabble

C17: from French râble, from Latin rutābulum rake for a furnace, from ruere to rake, dig up
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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