Etymology 1
Borrowed from Latin gȳrus (“circle; circular motion”), from Ancient Greek γῦρος (gûros, “circle; ring”), from Proto-Indo-European *gew- (“to bend; to curve”). The English word is a doublet of gyro and gyrus.[1]
Noun
gyre (plural gyres)
- (chiefly literary, poetic)
- A swirling vortex.
- A circular or spiral motion; also, a circle described by a moving body; a revolution, a turn.
- Synonyms: circuit, whirl
1700, [John] Dryden, “Meleager and Atalanta, out of the Eighth Book of Ovid’s Metamorphosis”, in Fables Ancient and Modern; […], London: […] Jacob Tonson, […], →OCLC, page 112:Quick, and more quick he ſpins in giddy Gires, / Then falls, and in much Foam his Soul expires.
1856, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, “Fourth Book”, in Aurora Leigh, London: Chapman and Hall, […], published 1857, →OCLC, pages 176–177:What is art, / But life upon the larger scale, the higher, / When, graduating up in a spiral line / Of still expanding and ascending gyres, / It pushes toward the intense significance / Of all things, hungry for the Infinite? / Art's life,—and where we live, we suffer and toil.
- (anatomy, zootomy, archaic) Synonym of gyrus (“a fold or ridge on the cerebral cortex of the brain”)
- (oceanography) An ocean current caused by wind which moves in a circular manner, especially one that is large-scale and observed in a major ocean.
Translations
circular or spiral motion
synonym of gyrus
— see gyrus
ocean current caused by wind which moves in a circular manner
Etymology 2
From Late Middle English giren (“to turn (something) away; to cause (something) to revolve or rotate; to travel in a circle”),[2] from Old French girer (“to turn”), and directly from its etymon Latin gȳrāre, the present active infinitive of gȳrō (“to turn in a circle, rotate; to circle or revolve around”), from gȳrus (“circle; circular motion”) (see etymology 1)[3] + -ō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs).
Verb
gyre (third-person singular simple present gyres, present participle gyring, simple past and past participle gyred) (literary, poetic)
- (intransitive) To spin around; to gyrate, to whirl.
- Synonyms: revolve, rotate
1605, Michael Drayton, “[Songs from the ‘Shepherd’s Garland’.] From Eclogue ij.”, in Cyril Brett, editor, Minor Poems of Michael Drayton, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Clarendon Press, published 1907, →OCLC, pages 240–241, lines 4–8:The host of heauenly beautyes moue, / Depainted in their proper stories, / As well the fixd as wandring glories, / Which from their proper orbes not goe, / Whether they gyre swift or slowe: […]
- (transitive, rare) To make (something) spin or whirl around; to spin, to whirl.
Derived terms
- gyring (adjective, noun)
- gyringly
Translations
to make (something) spin or whirl around
— see spin,
whirl