Awheel vs Aweel - What's the difference?
awheel | aweel |
(dated) Riding a bicycle.
:* {{quote-web
, date=2009-02-16
, year=
, first=
, last=
, author=
, authorlink=
, title=Keeping it Reeled In
, site=Bike Snob NYC
travelling by a wheeled vehicle; mobile
:* {{quote-magazine
, date=1927-10-01
, year=
, month=
, first=
, last=
, author=Johnson
, coauthors=
, title=Talk of the Town
, volume=
, issue=
, page=
, magazine=New Yorker
, publisher=
, issn=
, url=
, passage=... an observer at large who chanced to be at the corner of Fourteenth Street and Seventh Avenue late one night when the traffic signals brought to a halt the few taxis that were awheel then.
}}
circling, moving in the shape of a wheel
:* {{quote-book
, year=1983
, year_published=
, edition=
, editor=
, author=Poul Anderson
, title=Time Patrolman
, chapter=The Sorrow of Odin the Goth
, url=
, genre=Sci-fi
, publisher=Tom Doherty
, isbn=9780812530766
, page=
, passage=Its light glimmered on the river and on the wings of carrion fowl awheel overhead.
}}
As an adjective awheel
is riding a bicycle.As an interjection aweel is
well; well then.awheel
English
Adjective
(-)citation, archiveorg= , accessdate=2012-08-26 , passage=Originally we were supposed to conduct the interview on bikes (or "awheel " as the British say) … }}