The Collaborative International Dictionary
Moile \Moile\, n. [F. mule a slipper.] A kind of high shoe anciently worn. [Written also moyle.]
Wiktionary
n. 1 (alternative form of moil English) 2 (alternative form of moile English) vb. (alternative form of moil English)
Wikipedia
Moyle can refer to:
Usage examples of "moyle".
I have to say to you Michael, is in the strictest confidence Mr Moyle is likely to have a re-shuffle this year Bailly-Lynnes is likely to go.
Mr Moyle is a wily one, and he has a nose for the rights and wrongs of a situation.
He could contact Moyle before the meeting and blow the gaff tell him everything he knew, being a good company man and all that jazz.
He thought carefully about Moyle: The Chairman called himself Jackson Moyle, but the inside crowd knew he had been born Jacob Mintz.
Again, Moyle lifted a plump hand, and the gentle sad mouth twisted into a faint smile.
This, I realized, must be the river Moyle, at whose mouth the city of Goimr is located.
Goimr is located on the underbelly of the great sub-continent of Grotum, at the place where the river Moyle joins the sea.
One hand played in the bass the melody of Silent, O Moyle, while the other hand careered in the treble after each group of notes.
To Milly Moyle, of 12, Claremont Grove, twelve thousand pounds, free of legacy duty.
Jeremy Moyle, Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1973, page 61.
Before the war they had gone on school outings to Moyles Court at the other end of the forest, for the red old manor house was full of history.
Hurricanes from Moyles Court shot down eight Germans in the Channel this morning.
He was the same youth who had been playing netball on the day she had first gone to Moyles Court.
At RAF Moyles Court, however, on that mellow late daylight hour, the wireless set in the mess and the second set in the stand-by room issued their sound to little but tables and chairs.
At Moyles Court, however, the young airmen continued to enjoy the evening warmth out of doors as though the speech were nothing to do with them.