"Trolling for fish" is a form of angling where lines with hook-rigged lures are dragged behind a boat to entice fish to bite. Compare the term "Trawling for fish," which involves dragging a net behind a boat to catch large numbers of fish.
Internet trolling involves a user making comments intended to provoke an angry response.
Trolling can also mean walking. This is more or less basic slang now (from stroll), but it used to be
polari. This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ... Angling is a method of fishing, specifically the practice of catching fish by means of an angle (hook). ... // Trawling Trawling is a method of fishing that involves actively pulling a fishing net through the water behind one or more boats, called trawlers. ... An Internet troll, or simply troll in Internet slang, is someone who intentionally posts messages about sensitive topics constructed to cause controversy in an online community such as an online discussion forum or USENET groups in order to bait users into responding. ... An animated demonstration of a six-legged insect walking. ... Polari (or alternatively Palare, from Italian parlare, to talk) was a form of cant slang used in the gay subculture in Britain. ...
"Trolling" is an uncivil form of editing behavior as defined in the Wikipedia policies and guidlines.
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A troll would then also be able to increase his or her influence in an entire online community by simply using those other self serving nicks to increase the attention towards his or her most favored account.
Trolling can be described as a breaching experiment, originally conceived of by sociologist Harold Garfinkel, which, because of the use of an alternate persona, allows for normal social boundaries and rules of etiquette to be tested or otherwise broken, without serious consequences.
Trolls can also, in some circumstances, be a source of genuine humour, which depends entirely upon whether the troll is a good or a bad troll.
In Sweden, trolls adopted many of the fairy-like traits of the land-wights (vättar, compare Icelandic landvættir) and thus came to be inclined to thieving and the abduction of humans which, in the case of infant abductees, was substituted with a changeling.
Female trolls may conspire to force the prince to marry their daughters, as in East of the Sun and West of the Moon, or practice witchcraft, as in The Witch in the Stone Boat, where a troll usurps a queen's place, or The Twelve Wild Ducks, where she turns twelve princes into wild ducks.