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			“roiling”
		
	
			roil (ROIL) (verb), roils; roiled; roiling
					1. To irritate; to ruffle the temper, or to arouse the resentment of; to vex,; to rile: The governor was roiled by the obvious lies that were being told about his family.
2. Etymology: from French rouiller, "to make muddy". The first definition of the English word given in the major dictionaries; therefore, is that of making water or wine cloudy or opaque; as the water was roiled by the ship's propellers.

 
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																	2. Etymology: from French rouiller, "to make muddy". The first definition of the English word given in the major dictionaries; therefore, is that of making water or wine cloudy or opaque; as the water was roiled by the ship's propellers.


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								This entry is located in the following unit:
							
																						
									English Words in Action, Group R									
										(page 5)
									
								
													
									To irritate, to make angry; to disturb. (2)
																	
							
								This entry is located in the following unit:
							
																						
									Word a Day Revisited Index of Cartoons Illustrating the Meanings of Words									
										(page 70)