cull
See also: Cull
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English cullen, cuilen, coilen, from Old French cuillir (“collect, gather, select”), from Latin colligō (“gather together”). Doublet of coil.
Verb
cull (third-person singular simple present culls, present participle culling, simple past and past participle culled)
- To pick or take someone or something (from a larger group).
- 1984, cover star: JOE DALLESANDRO culled from Andy Warhol's FLESH — anonymous; sleeve notes from The Smiths' eponymous album
- To gather, collect.
- Tennyson
- whitest honey in fairy gardens culled
- 1977, Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, Penguin Classics, page 202:
- Chaucer's prose Tale of Melibee […] is a dialectal homily of moral debate, exhibiting a learned store of ethical precept culled from many ancient authorities.
- Tennyson
- To select animals from a group and then kill them in order to reduce the numbers of the group in a controlled manner.
- (nonstandard, euphemistic) To kill (animals etc).
- To lay off in order to reduce the size of, get rid of.
Translations
to pick or take someone or something
to select animals from a group and then kill them
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Noun
cull (plural culls)
- A selection.
- An organised killing of selected animals.
- 2012 December 21, Isobel Montgomery, “A year that showed the best and worst of Britain”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 188, number 2, page 31:
- It seemed that the sun shone and all was right in our Blakean islands until the government began to set in motion its promised cull of badgers in an effort to control bovine TB. Salvation for brock came in the form of an online petition started by Queen guitarist Brian May, the rising costs of the programme and the weather.
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- A piece unfit for inclusion within a larger group; an inferior specimen.
Translations
an item rejected as unfit for inclusion
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Etymology 2
Perhaps an abbreviation of cully.
Noun
cull (plural culls)
Albanian
Alternative forms
Etymology
Possibly from Proto-Indo-European *g(')elt- (“womb”). Compare Sanskrit जर्त (jarta), जर्तु (jártu, “vulva”), Swedish kull (“brood, litter”), English child.
Derived terms
- cullak
Catalan
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