devil

1 of 2

noun

dev·​il ˈde-vᵊl How to pronounce devil (audio)
 dialectal  ˈdi-
1
often capitalized : the personal supreme spirit of evil often represented in Christian belief as the tempter of humankind, the leader of all apostate angels, and the ruler of hell
usually used with the
often used as an interjection, an intensive, or a generalized term of abuse
what the devil is this?
the devil you say!
2
: an evil spirit : demon
3
a
: an extremely wicked person : fiend
b
archaic : a great evil
4
: a person of notable energy, recklessness, and dashing spirit
also : one who is mischievous
those kids are little devils today
5
: fellow
usually used in the phrases poor devil, lucky devil
6
a
: something very trying or provoking
having a devil of a time with this problem
b
: severe criticism or rebuke : hell
used with the
I'll probably catch the devil for this
c
: the difficult, deceptive, or problematic part of something
the devil is in the details
7
8
Christian Science : the opposite of Truth : a belief in sin, sickness, and death : evil, error

devil

2 of 2

verb

deviled or devilled; deviling or devilling ˈde-və-liŋ How to pronounce devil (audio)
ˈdev-liŋ

transitive verb

1
: to season highly
deviled eggs
2
Phrases
between the devil and the deep blue sea
: faced with two equally objectionable alternatives
devil to pay
: severe consequences
used with the
there'll be the devil to pay if we're late

Examples of devil in a Sentence

Noun She is a tricky devil, so be careful. Those kids can be little devils sometimes. He's such a lucky devil that he'll probably win the lottery someday.
Recent Examples on the Web
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Noun
For example, they are allowed to make an educational point by playing devil’s advocate in a class debate on contemporary American politics. Clara Harter, Los Angeles Times, 21 Nov. 2024 Campbell plays Chief Dandridge, the head of police in a Michigan town gripped by a Satanic panic in the late 1980s — although the actual devil might also be lurking — and trying to solve a murder case that sets off the panic. Rick Porter, The Hollywood Reporter, 18 Oct. 2024
Verb
Asking god to heal his body and mind… devil you a lie. Tommy McArdle, Peoplemag, 5 Oct. 2023 Thus, dinner at Speak is a mix of their fancy-food greatest hits, like bone marrow bruschetta ($18), lobster deviled eggs ($18), and a Caesar or wedge salad ($12 or $14). Sarah Blaskovich, Dallas News, 23 June 2023 See all Example Sentences for devil 

Word History

Etymology

Noun

Middle English devel, del, dule, going back to Old English dēofol, dīoful, going back to West Germanic *diuvul- (whence also Old Frisian diūvel, diōvel, Old Saxon diuƀal, Middle Dutch duvel, Old High German tiuval, tiufal), probably borrowed from an early Romance outcome of Late Latin diabolus "the Devil," borrowed from Greek diábolos (New Testament, Septuagint, as a rendering of Hebrew śāṭān satan), earlier, "accuser, backbiter, slanderer," agentive derivative of diabállein "to take across, put through, set at variance, attack (a person's character), accuse, slander," from dia- dia- + bállō, bállein "to reach by throwing, let fly, strike, put, place," going back to earlier *gwəl-n-ō or *gwəl-i̯-ō, perhaps going back to an Indo-European base *gwelh1-

Note: The standard English pronunciation of devil with the outcome of a short vowel presumably reflects shortening of the Old English dipththong -ēo-/-īo- in syncopated forms, as the nominative plural dēoflas. The early Modern English form divel (as in Shakespeare), preserved in regional and dialectal speech in both Britain and the U.S., shows Middle English shortening of original ẹ̄ to i. Forms such as Middle English dele and early Scots dele show loss of v before a syllable ending in a liquid. — Greek bállein and its many prefixed forms are rich in nominal derivatives, usually with o-grade (as in diábolos, perhaps secondarily agentive, after the adjective diábolos "slanderous, backbiting") or with zero grade blē- (going back to *gwl̥h1-C-). That the original consonant was a labiovelar is assured by the Arcadian form esdellō, with e-grade, corresponding to Greek ekballō "expel, let fall." Despite its thoroughly Indo-European formal properties, bállein has no certain cognates outside Greek.

Verb

derivative of devil entry 1

First Known Use

Noun

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

1787, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of devil was before the 12th century

Dictionary Entries Near devil

Cite this Entry

“Devil.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/devil. Accessed 17 Dec. 2024.

Kids Definition

devil

1 of 2 noun
dev·​il ˈdev-əl How to pronounce devil (audio)
1
often capitalized : the personal supreme spirit of evil often represented as the ruler of hell
often used with the as a mild oath or expression of surprise, irritation, or emphasis
2
3
a
: a person who is wicked, mischievous, reckless, or lively
b
: person sense 1
usually used in the phrases poor devil and lucky devil

devil

2 of 2 verb
deviled or devilled; deviling or devilling ˈdev-(ə-)liŋ How to pronounce devil (audio)
1
: to season highly
deviled eggs
2

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