idle
idle (īd′'l)
adjective idler i′dler, idlest i′dlest
- having no value, use, or significance; worthless; useless idle talk
- vain; futile; pointless an idle wish
- baseless; unfounded idle rumors
- unemployed; not busy
- inactive; not in use idle machines
- not filled with activity idle hours
- not inclined to work; lazy
- designating certain parts of a fuel system that set an engine's idling speed
Etymology: ME idel < OE, empty, akin to Ger eitel, vain, empty < ? IE base *ai-dh, to burn, shine: basic sense, either “only apparent, seeming” or “burned out”
intransitive verb idled i′dled, idling i′dling
- to move slowly or aimlessly; loaf
- to spend time unprofitably; be unemployed or inactive
- to operate without transmitting power; esp., to operate a motor vehicle's engine while the vehicle is not moving
Etymology: < idlethe : parallel with OE idlian, to come to nothing, be useless
transitive verb
- to waste; squander: usually with away to idle away one's youth
- to cause (a motor, etc.) to idle
- to cause to be inactive or unemployed
noun
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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