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Synonyms

spindle

American  
[spin-dl] / ˈspɪn dl /

noun

  1. a rounded rod, usually of wood, tapering toward each end, used in hand-spinning to twist into thread the fibers drawn from the mass on the distaff, and on which the thread is wound as it is spun.

  2. the rod on a spinning wheel by which the thread is twisted and on which it is wound.

  3. one of the rods of a spinning machine that bear the bobbins on which the spun thread is wound.

  4. any rod or pin suggestive of a spindle used in spinning, as one that turns around or on which something turns; an axle, axis, or shaft.

  5. a vertical shaft that serves to center a phonograph record on a turntable.

  6. either of two shafts or arbors that support the work on a lathe, one live spindle on the headstock, rotating with and imparting motion to the work, the other dead spindle on the tailstock, motionless.

  7. a small axis, arbor, or mandrel.

  8. an iron rod or the like, usually with a ball or cage at the top, fixed to a rock, sunken reef, etc., to serve as a guide in navigation.

  9. a measure of yarn, containing, for cotton, 15,120 yards (13,825 meters), and for linen, 14,400 yards (13,267 meters).

  10. a hydrometer.

  11. Cell Biology. a spindle-shaped structure, composed of microtubules, that forms near the cell nucleus during mitosis or meiosis and, as it divides, draws the chromosomes to opposite poles of the cell.

  12. a short, turned or circular ornament, as in a baluster or stair rail.

  13. spindle file.

  14. Eastern New England. a tassel on an ear of corn.

  15. Chiefly New Jersey and Delaware Valley. dragonfly.


adjective

  1. spindle side.

verb (used with object)

spindled, spindling
  1. to give the form of a spindle to.

  2. to provide or equip with a spindle or spindles.

  3. to impale (a card or paper) on a spindle, as for sorting purposes.

verb (used without object)

spindled, spindling
  1. to shoot up, or grow, into a long, slender stalk or stem, as a plant.

  2. to grow tall and slender, often disproportionately so.

spindle British  
/ ˈspɪndəl /

noun

  1. a rod or stick that has a notch in the top, used to draw out natural fibres for spinning into thread, and a long narrow body around which the thread is wound when spun

  2. one of the thin rods or pins bearing bobbins upon which spun thread is wound in a spinning wheel or machine

  3. any of various parts in the form of a rod, esp a rotating rod that acts as an axle, mandrel, or arbor

  4. a piece of wood that has been turned, such as a baluster or table leg

  5. a small square metal shaft that passes through the lock of a door and to which the door knobs or handles are fixed

  6. a measure of length of yarn equal to 18 hanks (15 120 yards) for cotton or 14 400 yards for linen

  7. biology a spindle-shaped structure formed by microtubules during mitosis or meiosis which draws the duplicated chromosomes apart as the cell divides

  8. a less common name for a hydrometer

  9. a tall pole with a marker at the top, fixed to an underwater obstruction as an aid to navigation

  10. a device consisting of a sharp upright spike on a pedestal on which bills, order forms, etc, are impaled

  11. short for spindle tree

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. (tr) to form into a spindle or equip with spindles

  2. rare (intr) (of a plant, stem, shoot, etc) to grow rapidly and become elongated and thin

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
spindle Scientific  
/ spĭndl /
  1. A network of protein fibers that forms in the cytoplasm of a cell during cell division. The spindle grows forth from the centrosomes and attaches to the chromosomes after the latter have been duplicated, and the nuclear membrane dissolves. Once attached, the spindle fibers contract, pulling the duplicate chromosomes apart to opposite poles of the dividing cell.

  2. See more at meiosis mitosis


Regionalisms

See dragonfly.

Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of spindle

before 900; Middle English spindel (noun), Old English spin ( e ) l; see spin, -le; cognate with German Spindel

Explanation

A spindle is a narrow wooden rod that's used when spinning wool. If your aunt has a spinning wheel for making yarn from the wool of her sheep, it must have a spindle on it for twisting the fibers. The noun spindle can be used to talk about a number of different forms of wooden rod or dowel, particularly if they turn or spin. A yarn spinner's spindle is one kind — another is a chair leg or a banister rail that was made from being turned on a lathe. In fact, spindle and spin share a common root word, the Old English spinnan, "draw out and twist fibers into a thread."

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing spindle

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Ellie Knot, of Devon Biodiversity Records Centre, said there were eight species of ermine moth, so it was hard to tell if these were spindle ermine.

From BBC • May 13, 2026

Words become a texture of stasis, as when “winding” and “whirring” are repeated multiple times to describe Thorn Rose’s climb to the turret where she finds the fatal spindle.

From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 24, 2026

Thought to be made from a cattle femur, this decorated Anglo-Saxon spindle whorl, used to provide weight while spinning yarn, was unearthed from farmland near Bishopstone, Buckinghamshire.

From BBC • Jan. 30, 2026

Then push the spindle against something hard to slide the motor assembly out the bottom.

From Seattle Times • May 2, 2024

And she took their ragged clothes and with thread she herself spun on a bamboo spindle from a wad of cotton she mended and contrived to cover the rents in their winter clothes.

From "The Good Earth" by Pearl S. Buck

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