Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at trollers.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Trollers.
Examples
-
‘Troll’ occasionally appears in place names in areas in Britain with a strong Norse influence, such as Trollers Gill in Yorkshire (Yorkshire was part of the ninth-century Danelaw and later part of the Anglo-Norse kingdom of York), and especially in northern and western Scotland, such as Trollaval on the island of Rum, and Trolla Vatn in Orkney (a name that could have come straight off a modern Norwegian map; it translates as ‘troll water’ or ‘troll lake’).
Kings of Lindsey Carla 2010
-
‘Troll’ occasionally appears in place names in areas in Britain with a strong Norse influence, such as Trollers Gill in Yorkshire (Yorkshire was part of the ninth-century Danelaw and later part of the Anglo-Norse kingdom of York), and especially in northern and western Scotland, such as Trollaval on the island of Rum, and Trolla Vatn in Orkney (a name that could have come straight off a modern Norwegian map; it translates as ‘troll water’ or ‘troll lake’).
Old English gods and myths: Eotens Carla 2010
-
‘Troll’ occasionally appears in place names in areas in Britain with a strong Norse influence, such as Trollers Gill in Yorkshire (Yorkshire was part of the ninth-century Danelaw and later part of the Anglo-Norse kingdom of York), and especially in northern and western Scotland, such as Trollaval on the island of Rum, and Trolla Vatn in Orkney (a name that could have come straight off a modern Norwegian map; it translates as ‘troll water’ or ‘troll lake’).
Kings of Lindsey Carla 2010
-
‘Troll’ occasionally appears in place names in areas in Britain with a strong Norse influence, such as Trollers Gill in Yorkshire (Yorkshire was part of the ninth-century Danelaw and later part of the Anglo-Norse kingdom of York), and especially in northern and western Scotland, such as Trollaval on the island of Rum, and Trolla Vatn in Orkney (a name that could have come straight off a modern Norwegian map; it translates as ‘troll water’ or ‘troll lake’).
Archive 2010-08-01 Carla 2010
-
‘Troll’ occasionally appears in place names in areas in Britain with a strong Norse influence, such as Trollers Gill in Yorkshire (Yorkshire was part of the ninth-century Danelaw and later part of the Anglo-Norse kingdom of York), and especially in northern and western Scotland, such as Trollaval on the island of Rum, and Trolla Vatn in Orkney (a name that could have come straight off a modern Norwegian map; it translates as ‘troll water’ or ‘troll lake’).
Kings of Lindsey Carla 2010
-
The director of the Alaska Trollers Association, Dale Kelley, agreed, saying that without labels, "you're not sure what's on your plate."
Industry Fights Altered Salmon Alicia Mundy 2010
-
Without Mangers and Trollers to direct it, the Kicksey-winsey itself has been taking whatever steps were required for its own brainless survival.
The Hand of Chaos Hickman, Tracy 1993
-
Trollers and proprietary companies attempt to intimidate open source projects into non existence, force open source projects without revenue to take licenses and organizations that behave hostile to the GPL all the time, he said.
Resources | ZDNet 2010
-
Trollers are working the waters straight east of the north gap to the filtration plant in waters 80-130 feet deep.
JSOnline.com 2010
-
Trollers have been using flashers with a half a crawler or a needle fish lure.
Tahoe Daily Tribune - Top Stories By Doug Busey 2010
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.