| 1. | up to the time of; until: to fight till death. |
| 2. | before (used in negative constructions): He did not come till today. |
| 3. | near or at a specified time: till evening. |
| 4. | Chiefly Midland, Southern, and Western U.S. before; to: It's ten till four on my watch. |
| 5. | Scot. and North England.
|
| 6. | to the time that or when; until. |
| 7. | before (used in negative constructions). |
,| 1. | to labor, as by plowing or harrowing, upon (land) for the raising of crops; cultivate. |
| 2. | to plow. |
| 3. | to cultivate the soil. |

,| 1. | a drawer, box, or the like, as in a shop or bank, in which money is kept. |
| 2. | a drawer, tray, or the like, as in a cabinet or chest, for keeping valuables. |
| 3. | an arrangement of drawers or pigeonholes, as on a desk top. |

| till (tĭl) Pronunciation Key
An unstratified, unconsolidated mass of boulders, pebbles, sand, and mud deposited by the movement or melting of a glacier. The size and shape of the sediments that constitute till vary widely. |
till
In addition to the subsequent idioms beginning with till, also see hand in the till; until.