chavel
See also: čhavêl
English
Etymology
From Middle English chavel, from Old English ċeafl (“a bill, beak, snout, jaw, jaw-bone, cheek, cheek-bone”), from Proto-Germanic *kaflaz, *keflaz, *kefraz (“jaw”), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵēbh-, *gēbh- (“jaw, gills”). Cognate with Middle Low German kavel (“jaw, gums, palate”), Dutch kevels (“jawbones, toothless jaws”), Middle High German kivel, kivele, kiuwel (“jaw”). More at jowl.
Verb
chavel (third-person singular simple present chavels, present participle chavelling, simple past and past participle chavelled)
- (transitive, Britain, dialectal) To chew.
- D. H. Lawrence
- The bracken lay sere under the trees, broken and chavelled by the restless wild winds of the long winter.
- D. H. Lawrence
Romansch
Alternative forms
- tgavel
- chavè
- cavegl
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