Good; fortunate; opportune; happy.n. Good fortune; happiness; bliss.n. Opportunity; time; season: as, the seel of the day: used frequently as the second element in a compound: as, hay-seel (hay-time), barley-seel. etc.To close, or close the eyes of, with a thread.Hence To close, as a person's eyes; blind; hoodwink.To lean; incline to One side; heel; roll, as a ship in a storm.n. A roll or pitch, as of a ship in a storm.A Middle English form of seal.