roll

/rəʊl/ (bre, ipa) · /rəʊl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈrōl/ (ame, mw) · /roʊl/ (ame, ipa)

roll — verb

1. to change position across the ground by spinning, so that the leading and traili

1.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

to change position across the ground by spinning, so that the leading and trailing parts of a round object, or the head and feet of a person, repeatedly swap places while moving in a given direction.

例句

Emre watched the orange ball roll down the hill and into the street.

roll + adv/prep: down + into

The children took turns to roll a large tyre across the field.

transitive: roll + noun + adv/prep

同義詞
  • tumble

    implies falling awkwardly, not necessarily on purpose

  • spin

    focuses on rotation itself, not necessarily forward motion

文法句型

roll + adv/prep

roll + noun + adv/prep

用法筆記

Frequently followed by a preposition or adverb (down, off, across, onto) that specifies direction. The intransitive form describes the object's own motion; the transitive form means someone causes the motion.

常見錯誤

The ball rotated down the hill.
The ball rolled down the hill.
💡'rotate' means spin in place; 'roll' means spin and move across a surface.

2. to move ahead in a smooth, even way without jerks or halts — like a car coasting

2.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

to move ahead in a smooth, even way without jerks or halts — like a car coasting downhill, water running in a channel, or smoke drifting on the breeze.

例句

Jin rolled his suitcase along the platform to reach the train.

transitive: roll + noun + along

Thick fog rolled across the valley after the sun went down.

intransitive + adv/prep (fog as subject)

同義詞
  • glide

    implies silent, effortless motion; more literary

  • flow

    used for liquids or crowds, not wheeled vehicles

文法句型

roll + adv/prep

roll + noun + adv/prep

用法筆記

Subject is often a vehicle, a body of water, fog or smoke, or tears. Unlike sense 1, there is no turning over; the entire object glides or flows as a whole.

常見錯誤

The car rolled over down the driveway.
The car rolled down the driveway.
💡'roll over' means turning onto its side (an accident); smooth movement is just 'roll'.

3. to lean repeatedly from one side to the other and back again, describing the mov

3.動詞不及物B1
釋義

to lean repeatedly from one side to the other and back again, describing the movement of a ship, aircraft, or vehicle when pushed by wind or waves.

例句

The ship rolled heavily as the storm broke over the deck.

intransitive: ship rolls in bad weather

The small plane began to roll from side to side in the strong wind.

roll from side to side

同義詞
  • rock

    gentler motion, used for smaller boats or chairs

  • sway

    slower, more controlled side-to-side motion

文法句型

roll (with no object — describes the vehicle)

用法筆記

Distinct from 'pitch' (front-to-back tilt) and 'yaw' (left-right swivel of the nose). Only 'roll' describes side-to-side leaning. Common in weather reports and travel stories.

常見錯誤

The boat rolled forward in the water.
The boat rolled from side to side in the water.
💡this sense describes side-to-side motion, not forward movement.

4. to begin functioning or moving, especially of cameras, printing equipment, or pr

4.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

to begin functioning or moving, especially of cameras, printing equipment, or production lines; or to cause such equipment to start.

例句

The camera crew started rolling the moment the actor spoke.

transitive: roll a camera = start filming

The printing press was already rolling by the time I arrived.

intransitive: machine rolls = is running

同義詞
  • start

    more general, does not imply continuous operation

  • run

    focuses on the state of operating, not the start

反義詞

文法句型

roll (machine as subject)

roll + noun (start the machine)

用法筆記

Common in film production ('rolling' = the camera is recording). Also used for any industrial or mechanical process. 'Get rolling' is a fixed informal phrase meaning 'start'.

5. to move your eyes upward in a circular motion as a way of showing that you find

5.動詞及物C2
釋義

to move your eyes upward in a circular motion as a way of showing that you find something or someone stupid, annoying, or not worth taking seriously.

例句

Felipe rolled his eyes when his friend told the same joke again.

roll + possessive + eyes + at/about [trigger]

Kemi rolled her eyes at her brother's silly excuse for being late.

文法句型

roll + possessive + eyes

用法筆記

The object is always a possessive determiner + 'eyes' ('my eyes', 'his eyes', 'their eyes'). The phrase is informal and often considered rude in formal settings. Cannot be used with a different body part.

常見錯誤

She rolled her head at his comment.
She rolled her eyes at his comment.
💡only eyes can be 'rolled' in this sense.

6. to turn or wind a flat, flexible object over itself repeatedly so that it become

6.動詞及物B1
釋義

to turn or wind a flat, flexible object over itself repeatedly so that it becomes a tube, ball, or neat bundle, or to cover something by wrapping it in this way.

例句

Théo rolled his wet towel into a tight ball before packing it.

roll + noun + into a ball/tube

Christopher rolled up his sleeves and began to knead the dough.

roll up = fold upward (clothing)

同義詞
  • coil

    implies winding around a central point, like a hose

  • fold

    bending flat, not forming a cylinder or ball

反義詞
  • unroll

    to open out something that was rolled up

文法句型

roll + noun + up/down/into

roll + noun + adv/prep

用法筆記

Often used with particles: 'roll up' (fold upward, as with sleeves or blinds), 'roll into' (form into a ball or cylinder), 'roll out' (unfurl, the opposite action). Sense 6 contrasts with sense 1 because the object does not travel across a surface — instead it changes shape.

常見錯誤

She rolled the map to see the details.
She unrolled the map to see the details.
💡'roll up' means to make it compact; 'unroll' means to open it flat.

7. to create a cigarette by placing a small amount of tobacco on a thin paper, then

7.動詞及物B1
釋義

to create a cigarette by placing a small amount of tobacco on a thin paper, then wrapping and twisting the paper closed by hand

例句

At the party, Bao showed his cousin how to roll a cigarette with one hand.

roll + cigarette (the making, not the smoking)

Naoko bought rolling papers from the corner shop but had trouble rolling them neatly.

同義詞
  • make

    more general; 'roll' specifies the hand-made method with paper

  • hand-roll

    less common; used specifically to contrast with machine-made

文法句型

roll + cigarette

用法筆記

Object is always 'a/one's cigarette' or a closely related noun like 'one's own'. Not used for machine-made cigarettes.

常見錯誤

He rolled the cigarette between his fingers.
He rolled a cigarette with tobacco and paper.
💡The first sentence describes turning an existing cigarette, not making one.

8. to shorten a sleeve, trouser leg, or similar garment item by turning its lower e

8.動詞及物 / 不及物B1
釋義

to shorten a sleeve, trouser leg, or similar garment item by turning its lower edge upward and pressing the folded material against itself

例句

Nellie rolled up the sleeves of her shirt before washing the dishes.

roll up + clothing item

Lan rolled the cuffs of his trousers to keep them dry in the puddles.

同義詞
  • fold

    more general; 'roll' implies a tighter, more cylindrical fold

  • turn up

    British English; common for trousers or sleeves

反義詞
  • unroll

    to open out what was folded

文法句型

roll + up + noun phrase

roll + adverb/preposition

用法筆記

Often used with the particle 'up'. The intransitive form is less common and usually needs an adverb like 'well' or 'easily'.

常見錯誤

I rolled my sleeve' (when meaning you folded the edge).
I rolled up my sleeve.
💡The particle 'up' is standard for this sense.

9. to press and flatten a surface by moving a heavy cylindrical object such as a ro

9.動詞及物B1
釋義

to press and flatten a surface by moving a heavy cylindrical object such as a roller or rolling pin over it

例句

After spreading the dough, Layla rolled it flat with a wooden pin.

roll + dough + flat (resultative adjective)

The groundskeeper rolled the cricket pitch to make it smooth for the match.

同義詞
  • flatten

    more general; 'roll' specifies the tool and action

  • press

    less specific about the tool; can use hands or other objects

文法句型

roll + noun phrase + flat/out

用法筆記

Frequently used with a resultative adjective such as 'flat', 'thin', or 'level' to describe the outcome of pressing.

常見錯誤

I rolled the dough flatly.
I rolled the dough flat.
💡'Flat' is a resultative adjective, not an adverb.

10. to produce deep, low-pitched noise that lasts for several moments and changes in

10.動詞不及物B2
釋義

to produce deep, low-pitched noise that lasts for several moments and changes in volume, such as thunder moving across the sky or a large drum being struck repeatedly

例句

Thunder rolled across the valley as the storm approached the village.

roll + across/through [location]

In the temple courtyard, the great drums rolled slowly during the ceremony.

同義詞
  • rumble

    lower and more continuous; less about the build-and-fade quality

  • reverberate

    more formal; emphasises an echo or reflection of sound

文法句型

roll + adverb/preposition

用法筆記

Subject is usually a natural or artificial sound source such as thunder, drums, cannons, or an echo. The sound is continuous and low-pitched, not sharp or short.

常見錯誤

The bell rolled loudly.
The drums rolled loudly.
💡Bells ring or chime, they do not 'roll'.

11. to say the letter 'r' with a vibrating tongue tip that touches the area just beh

11.動詞及物B2
釋義

to say the letter 'r' with a vibrating tongue tip that touches the area just behind the upper teeth, creating a rapid trembling sound

例句

In Spanish class, Mr. Rodríguez taught Saira how to roll her r's.

roll + possessive + r's (standard pattern)

When speaking Italian, you must roll the r sound in words like 'carro'.

同義詞
  • trill

    the technical linguistic term; less common in everyday speech

文法句型

roll + possessive + r's

用法筆記

Only used with the letter 'r' (or 'r's') as the object. Cannot be used with other letters. The trilled 'r' is common in languages such as Spanish, Italian, Russian, and Scottish English.

常見錯誤

She rolled her l's in French.
She rolled her r's in Spanish.
💡The trill applies only to the 'r' sound, not other consonants.

roll — noun