tilt

pronunciation

How to pronounce tilt in British English: UK [tɪlt]word uk audio image

How to pronounce tilt in American English: US [tɪlt] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    a combat between two mounted knights tilting against each other with blunted lances
    a contentious speech act; a dispute where there is strong disagreement
    a slight but noticeable partiality
    the property possessed by a line or surface that departs from the vertical
    pitching dangerously to one side
  • Verb:
    to incline or bend from a vertical position
    heel over
    move sideways or in an unsteady way
    charge with a tilt

Word Origin

tilt
tilt: [14] Tilt originally meant ‘fall over’; the sense ‘slant’ is not recorded before the 16th century. The word is probably descended from an unrecorded Old English *tyltan, whose ultimate source would have been the prehistoric Germanic adjective *taltaz ‘unsteady’ (ancestor also of Swedish tulta ‘totter’). Tilt ‘joust’ (first recorded in the 16th century) has traditionally been regarded as the same word, based presumably on the notion of making one’s opponent ‘fall over’, but this is not certain.
tilt (v.1)
Old English *tyltan "to be unsteady," from tealt "unsteady," from Proto-Germanic *taltaz (cognates: Old Norse tyllast "to trip," Swedish tulta "to waddle," Norwegian tylta "to walk on tip-toe," Middle Dutch touteren "to swing"). Meaning "to cause to lean, tip, slope" (1590s) is from sense of "push or fall over." Intransitive sense "to lean, tip" first recorded 1620s. Related: Tilted; tilting.
tilt (n.1)
"a joust, a combat," 1510s, perhaps from tilt (v.1) on the notion of "to lean" into an attack, but the word originally seems to have been the name of the barrier which separated the combatants, which suggests connection with tilt in an earlier meaning "covering of coarse cloth, an awning" (mid-15c.). This is perhaps from tilt (v.1), or related to or influenced by tent. Watkins derives it from Old English teld "awning, tent," related to beteldan "to cover," from Proto-Germanic *teldam "thing spread out." Hence, also full tilt (c. 1600). Pinball machine sense is from 1934.
tilt (n.2)
"condition of being tilted," 1837, from tilt (v.1).
tilt (v.2)
"to joust," 1590s, from tilt (n.1). Related: Tilted; tilting. The figurative sense of tilting at windmills is suggested in English by 1798; the image is from Don Quixote, who mistook them for giants. So saying, and heartily recommending himself to his lady Dulcinea, whom he implored to succour him in this emergency, bracing on his target, and setting his lance in the rest, he put his Rozinante to full speed, and assaulting the nearest windmill, thrust it into one of the sails, which was drove about by the wind with so much fury, that the lance was shivered to pieces, and both knight and steed whirled aloft, and overthrown in very bad plight upon the plain. [Smollett translation, 1755]

Example

1. To control the swing , you just need tilt the device .
2. But I think many israelis exaggerate turkey 's eastward tilt .
3. Google can do more than merely tilt the playing field , because it owns the playing field .
4. Meet wild cats and some other carnivorous animal attacked , the hognose snake neck immediately become flat , mouth hiss , make the attack , like a cobra , it will tilt tail mimic rattlesnakes , the opponent away .
5. Tilt your chin slightly downward .

more: >How to Use "tilt" with Example Sentences