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  1. Dictionary
    trawl
    /trɔːl/

    verb

    • 1. fish with a trawl net or seine: "the boats trawled for flounder"
    • 2. search thoroughly: "the Home Office trawled through twenty-five-year-old confidential files"

    noun

    • 1. an act of fishing with a trawl net or seine: "they had caught two trout on the lazy trawl up-lake"
    • 2. a thorough search: "a constant trawl for information"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to pull a large, cone-shaped net through the sea at a deep level behind a special boat in order to catch fish: They trawl these waters for cod. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to take a wild or loose animal. catch The dog got out, but we caught her. net We netted a ton of fish downstream.

  3. noun. 1. : a large conical net dragged along the sea bottom in gathering fish or other marine life. 2. : setline. Examples of trawl in a Sentence. Verb The boat trawled far out at sea. a fishing boat trawling the ocean floor He trawled the Internet looking for websites on growing grapes.

  4. Trawl definition: a strong fishing net for dragging along the sea bottom.. See examples of TRAWL used in a sentence.

  5. If you trawl through a large number of similar things, you search through them looking for something that you want or something that is suitable for a particular purpose. A team of officers is trawling through the records of thousands of petty thieves.

  6. to pull a large, cone-shaped net through the sea at a deep level behind a special boat in order to catch fish: They trawl these waters for cod. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to take a wild or loose animal. catch The dog got out, but we caught her.

  7. Definitions of trawl. noun. a long fishing line with many shorter lines and hooks attached to it (usually suspended between buoys) synonyms: setline, spiller, trawl line, trotline. see more. noun. a conical fishnet dragged through the water at great depths. synonyms: dragnet, trawl net. see more.

  8. 1. To fish with a trawl. 2. To troll. 3. a. To search for or try to acquire something: a contractor trawling for day laborers. b. To make an examination of something: trawling through a writer's papers.

  9. trawl. [transitive, intransitive] to search through a large amount of information or a large number of people, places, etc. looking for a particular thing or person. trawl something (for something/somebody) She trawled the shops for bargains. Major companies trawl the universities for potential graduate trainees.

  10. [transitive, intransitive] to search through a large amount of information or a large number of people, places, etc. looking for a particular thing or person trawl something (for something/somebody) She trawled the thrift shops looking for bargains.

  11. Jun 2, 2024 · trawl (third-person singular simple present trawls, present participle trawling, simple past and past participle trawled) ( transitive, intransitive) To take (fish or other marine animals) with a trawl. ( intransitive) To fish from a slow-moving boat.