Noun
Millionaires built their castles along the lake.
the implacable attackers placed the castle under a prolonged siege
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Noun
The bulk of the action in The King Is Watching takes place on a small, 5x5 grid of squares representing your castle.—Kyle Orland, ArsTechnica, 1 Aug. 2025 Hogwarts Castle houses Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey, which hurls guests through the castle’s grounds and into the path of a dragon, acromantula (giant spiders like Aragog) and dementors.—Eve Chen, USA Today, 31 July 2025
Verb
The proactive Axar Patel hit an aggressive 27 before being castled by Nathan Ellis.—Tim Ellis, Forbes, 4 Mar. 2025 For example, pawns could not move two squares on their first turn, and there was no similar rule for castling.—Dylan Loeb McClain, New York Times, 27 May 2023 See All Example Sentences for castle
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English castel, from Old English, from Old French & Latin; Old French dialect (Norman-Picard) castel, from Latin castellum fortress, diminutive of castrum fortified place; perhaps akin to Latin castrare to castrate
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
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