roll vIn the spring when the caplin "come in and rolls" most men in Gillams gets some to salt and dry. . . . By"coming in and rolling", I mean the spawning of the Caplin, when large schools (locally "sculls") come right unto [sic] the beach. The rolling is the movement of the caplin, which is really not rolling but pressing against each other.DNE-citJH 6/71Used I and SupUsed I and Sup1Used IThe "/" in Form corresponds to the "/" in Word Form; only the two lines of the quotation are used in the dictionary; "[sic]" is typed above the line (line 4) and its insertion is indicated by a "/"