Kevin
When do you use "Whirl, twirl, swirl"? Hi, I'd be curious to know the differences between these three verbs of movement that have the same ending: "-irl" Could you give me common example sentences? What is less commonly used according to you?
5 août 2016 09:57
Réponses · 1
4
Just some impressions off the top of my head: 'Twirl' is usually a transitive verb. If a person twirls an object, they're moving it round in a light, repeated circular motion. Think of a cheerleader twirling her baton. NB The initial 'tw' of the verb often indicates a light movement with a person's fingers - think of tweak and twiddle. Also words like twist and twine. 'Swirl' is often used for liquids - think of eddy in a stream, or swirling cream into your coffee. It's also used in graphics to describe a loose, fluid curling shape. Try googling some images for 'swirl' and you'll see. 'Whirl' is similar, but it's usually faster, with more repetitions. Unlike swirl, whirling suggests complete revolutions, repeated many times. Think of whirling Dervishes. Whirling round can make you dizzy.
5 août 2016
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !