Roll

Roll

The word roll has these meanings:

*Roll (food)
* A thin flexible solid wound around a centre.
** Something wrapped around a tube, e.g. toilet roll.
** Paper strips wrapped around a thin quilling tool, e.g. quilling.
** A bank roll, a paper holder for coins
** A wrapped holder for similarly shaped items, such as a candy roll
* A list of records, especially of people (see also roster, rotulus, Pipe Rolls):
** Electoral roll, a list of eligible voters
** Credits roll, vertically moving text in video and film terminology
** The collective noun for the pupils of a school, e.g. "There are 1240 pupils in the school roll."
**Roll call
* Roll Man/Roll Woman - the purveyor of fine foods into offices around the world. e.g. "The roll man is here!". Emails announcing the arrival of the Roll Man to the office sometimes use subject lines that modify the context of the word 'Roll' e.g. "Roll Up Roll Up". Humour is often injected also.

In music

* Drum roll, a technique employed by percussionists to produce a sustained sound from a drum
**Gravity roll
**Single-stroke roll
* The Legato playing technique for stringed instruments (especially electric guitars)
*Music roll, a form of recording on a paper or other roll
*Piano roll, a music roll used in a player piano

In transport

* Bank or roll, an aerobatic manoeuvre
* "Roll program", a roll/bank performed after a rocket launch
* The rotating movement of a vessel about its longitudinal axis, as distinguished from the alternate rise and fall of bow and stern called pitching
* The smooth wheels fitted to a steamroller or road roller

People

* Bob Roll, an American professional cyclist and commentator
* Charles Rolls, co-founder of Rolls-Royce Limited and a pioneer aviator
* Eric Roll
* Ferdinand Nicolai Roll
* Gary Lee Roll
* Michael Roll
* Richard Roll
* William G. Roll

Places

In the United States:
*Roll, Indiana
*Roll, Oklahoma

In the atmosphere

*A roll cloud, usually found in the lee of mountains
*Horizontal convective rolls, in the boundary layer, the horizontal vortices that usually fill the layer, also known as organized large eddies

Other uses

* A trill consonant
* A kayak roll, the manoeuvre used to right a kayak that has capsized
* A heavy machine used in a steel mill; see rolling (metalworking)
* Roll (Mega Man), a female character in the "Mega Man" series of video games
* Rickroll, an Internet meme

ee also

* Rolling (disambiguation)


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  • roll — roll …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • roll — [rōl] vi. [ME rollen < OFr roller < VL * rotulare < L rotula: see ROLL the n.] 1. a) to move by turning on an axis or over and over b) to rotate about its axis lengthwise, as a spacecraft in flight 2. a) to move or be mov …   English World dictionary

  • Roll — bezeichnet: Personen: Alfred Philippe Roll (1847–1919), französischer Maler Christine Roll (* 1960) deutsche Historikerin Eric Roll, Lord Roll of Ipsden (1907–2005), britischer Wirtschaftswissenschaftler und Bankier Gernot Roll (* 1939),… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • roll — ► VERB 1) move by turning over and over on an axis. 2) move forward on wheels or with a smooth, undulating motion. 3) (of a moving ship, aircraft, or vehicle) sway on an axis parallel to the direction of motion. 4) (of a machine or device) begin… …   English terms dictionary

  • Roll — Roll, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Rolled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Rolling}.] [OF. roeler, roler, F. rouler, LL. rotulare, fr. L. royulus, rotula, a little wheel, dim. of rota wheel; akin to G. rad, and to Skr. ratha car, chariot. Cf. {Control}, {Roll}, n.,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Roll — Roll, n. [F. r[^o]le a roll (in sense 3), fr. L. rotulus ? little wheel, LL., a roll, dim. of L. rota a wheel. See {Roll}, v., and cf. {R[^o]le}, {Rouleau}, {Roulette}.] 1. The act of rolling, or state of being rolled; as, the roll of a ball; the …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • roll — [rəʊl ǁ roʊl] verb roll something → back phrasal verb [transitive] COMMERCE to reduce the price of something to a previous level: • the administration s promise to roll back taxes roll in phrasal verb [intransitive] …   Financial and business terms

  • Roll It — Roll It/Roll It Gal Alison Hinds J Status feat. Rihanna Shontelle Shontelle Veröffentlichung 18. März 2007 Länge 3:58 Genre(s) Reggae, R B …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • roll — [n1] revolving, turning cycle, gyration, reel, revolution, rotation, run, spin, trundling, turn, twirl, undulation, whirl; concepts 147,201 roll [n2] cylindrical object ball, barrel, bobbin, cartouche, coil, cone, convolution, cornucopia,… …   New thesaurus

  • roll — n 1: a document containing an official record 2: an official list the public relief roll s: as a: a list of members of a legislative body the clerk called the roll and recorded the votes b: a list of prac …   Law dictionary

  • roll on — May (a specified event) come quickly • • • Main Entry: ↑roll * * * roll on british spoken phrase used for saying that you wish something would happen soon Roll on the summer holidays! Thesaurus: expressions of hope …   Useful english dictionary

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