Noun
The car's rear wheels started to spin on the icy road.
the wheels of a train
a suitcase with wheels on the bottom
a wheel of cheddar cheese Verb
Doctors wheeled the patient into the operating room.
He wheeled his motorcycle into the garage.
Our waiter wheeled out a small dessert cart.
She wheeled around in her chair when I entered the room.
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Noun
Crawford made the jump to Europe, later joining an F1 team’s driver academy to grow, all aimed at one day racing at the highest open-wheel level.—Madeline Coleman, New York Times, 25 Oct. 2025 Garnish with a lime wheel, a couple pomegranate seeds or even nothing at all.—Jeremy Repanich, Robb Report, 25 Oct. 2025
Verb
The Timbers are also equipped with the free-wheeling, swing-for-the-fences, nothing-to-lose mentality.—Mark Zeigler, San Diego Union-Tribune, 25 Oct. 2025 Thirty-seven, Qing Yuan thought when a cleaner wheeled the corpse of a woman into the morgue.—Literary Hub, 23 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for wheel
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, from Old English hweogol, hwēol; akin to Old Norse hvēl wheel, Greek kyklos circle, wheel, Skt cakra, Latin colere to cultivate, inhabit, Sanskrit carati he moves, wanders
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
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