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English-Thai Dictionary

cull

N การ ลด จำนวน สัตว์ ลง  kan-lod-jam-nuan-sad-long

 

cull

N สิ่งไร้ค่า  สิ่ง ที่ ไม่ เป็นที่ต้องการ  sing-rai-ka

 

cull

VT คัดออก  khad-ook

 

cull

VT เลือกสรร  choose select lueak-san

 

cull from

PHRV คัดเลือก จาก  คัด สรร จาก  kad-lueak-jak

 

cull out

PHRV คัด ออกมา จาก กลุ่ม  cut out kad-ook-ma-jak-klum

 

cullender

N ที่ กรอง  colander

 

cullion

N คน ชั่วช้า 

 

cullis

N รางน้ำ  ร่อง 

 

cully

N คนโง่  หมู  คนที่ ถูก หลอก 

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

CULL

v.t.To pick out; to separate one or more things from others; to select from many; as, to cull flowers; to cull hoops and staves for market.

 

CULLED

pp. Picked out; selected from many.

 

CULLER

n. 1. One who picks or chooses from many.
2. An inspector who selects merchantable hoops and staves for market.

 

CULLIBILITY

n.[from cully. ] Credulity; easiness of belief. [Not elegant nor used. ]

 

CULLING

ppr. Selecting; choosing from many.

 

CULLION

n. 1. A mean wretch. If from cully, one easily deceived; a dupe.
2. A round or bulbous root; orchis. L.

 

CULLIONLY

a.Mean; base. [A bad word, and not used. ]

 

CULLIS

n. 1. Broth of boiled meat strained.
2. A kind of jelly.

 

CULLY

n.[See the Verb. ] A person who is meanly deceived, tricked or imposed on, as by a sharper, jilt, or strumpet; a mean dupe.

 

CULLY

v.t.To deceive; to trick, cheat or impose on; to jilt.

 

CULLYISM

n.The state of a cully. [Cully and its derivatives are not elegant words. ]

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

CULL

Cull (kl ), v. t. [imp. & p.p. Culled (kld ); p. pr. & Culling. ] Etym: [OE. , OF. cuillir, coillir, F.cueillir, to gather, pluck, pick, fr. L. colligere. See Coil, v. t., and cf. Collect. ]

 

Defn: To separate, select, or pick out; to choose and gather or collect; as, to cuil flowers. From his herd he culls, For slaughter, from the fairest of his bulls. Dryden. Whitest honey in fairy gardens culled. Tennyson.

 

CULL

CULL Cull, n.

 

Defn: A cully; a dupe; a gull. See Gully.

 

CULLENDER

CULLENDER Cul "len *der (kl "ln-dr ), n.

 

Defn: A strainer. See Colander.

 

CULLER

CULLER Cull "er (kl "r ), n.

 

Defn: One who piks or chooses; esp. , an inspector who select wares suitable for market.

 

CULLET

Cul "let (kl "lt ), n. Etym: [From Cull, v. t. ]

 

Defn: Broken glass for remelting.

 

CULLET

Cul "let, n. Etym: [A dim. from F. cul back. ]

 

Defn: A small central plane in the back of a cut gem. See Collet, 3 (b ).

 

CULLIBILITY

Cul `li *bil "i *ty (-l-bl "-ty ), n. Etym: [From cully to trick, cheat. ]

 

Defn: Gullibility. [R.] Swift.

 

CULLIBLE

CULLIBLE Cul "li *ble (kl "l-b'l ), a.

 

Defn: Easily deceived; gullible.

 

CULLING

CULLING Cull "ing (kl "ng ), n

 

1. The act of one who culls.

 

2. pl.

 

Defn: Anything separated or selected from a mass.

 

CULLION

Cul "lion (kl "yn ), n. Etym: [OF. couillon, coillon, F. co, a vile fellow, coward, dupe, from OF. couillon, coillon, testicle, fr. il the scrotum, fr. L. coleus a leather bag, the scrotum. ]

 

Defn: A mean wretch; a base fellow; a poltroon; a scullion. "Away, base cullions." Shak.

 

CULLIONLY

CULLIONLY Cul "lion *ly, a.

 

Defn: Mean; base. Shak.

 

CULLIS

Cul "lis (k, n. Etym: [OF. coleïs, F. coulis, fr. OF. & F. couler to strain, to flow, fr. L. colare to filter, strain; cf. LL. coladicium. Cf. Colander. ]

 

Defn: A strong broth of meat, strained and made clear for invalids; also, a savory jelly. [Obs. ] When I am exellent at caudles And cullises... you shall be welcome to me. Beau. & Fl.

 

CULLIS

Cul "lis, n.; pl. Cullises (-. Etym: [F.coulisse groove, fr. the same source as E. cullis broth. ] (Arch. )

 

Defn: A gutter in a roof; a channel or groove.

 

CULLS

Culls (klz ), n. pl. Etym: [From Cull, , v. t.]

 

1. Refuse timber, from which the best part has been culled out.

 

2. Any refuse stuff, as rolls not properly baked.

 

CULLY

Cul "ly (kl "l ), n.; pl. Cullies (-l. Etym: [Abbrev. fr. cullion. ]

 

Defn: A person easily deceived, tricked, or imposed on; a mean dupe; a gull. I have learned that. .. I am not the first cully whom she has passed upon for a countess. Addison.

 

CULLY

Cul "ly, v. t. Etym: [See Cully, n., and cf. D. kullen to cheat, gull. ]

 

Defn: To trick, cheat, or impose on; to deceive. "Tricks to cully fools." Pomfret.

 

CULLYISM

CULLYISM Cul "ly *ism (-z'm ), n.

 

Defn: The state of being a cully. Less frequent instances of eminent cullyism. Spectator.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

cull

cull |kəl kəl | verb [ with obj. ] (usu. be culled ) select from a large quantity; obtain from a variety of sources: anecdotes culled from Greek and Roman history. reduce the population of (a wild animal ) by selective slaughter: he sees culling deer as a necessity | (as noun culling ) : kangaroo culling. send (an inferior or surplus animal on a farm ) to be slaughtered. literary pick (flowers or fruit ): (as adj. culled ) : fresh culled daffodils. noun a selective slaughter of wild animals. [ usu. as modifier ] an inferior or surplus livestock animal selected for killing: a cull cow. DERIVATIVES cull er noun ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French coillier, based on Latin colligere (see collect 1 ).

 

Cullen, Countee

Cul len, Countee |ˈkələn ˈkələn | (1903 –46 ), US poet and prominent figure of the Harlem Renaissance. His works include Color (1925 ), The Black Christ (1929 ), and The Medea and Some Poems (1935 ).

 

Cullen skink

Cul ¦len skink |ˌkʌlən ˈskɪŋk | noun [ mass noun ] a Scottish soup made from smoked haddock, potatoes, onions, and milk. ORIGIN from the name of Cullen, a village on the Moray Firth in NE Scotland, + Scots skink soup made from shin of beef , probably from Middle Low German Schinke ham .

 

cullet

cul let |ˈkələt ˈkələt | noun recycled broken or waste glass used in glassmaking. ORIGIN early 19th cent.: variant of collet, in the obsolete sense glass left on the blowing iron when the finished article is removed.

 

Culloden, Battle of

Cul lo den, Battle of |kəˈlädn ˌbædl əv kəˈlɑdən | the final engagement of the Jacobite uprising of 1745 –46, fought April 16 on a moor near Inverness, the last pitched battle on British soil. The Hanoverian army under the Duke of Cumberland crushed the small and poorly supplied Jacobite army of Charles Edward Stuart, and a ruthless pursuit after the battle effectively prevented any chance of saving the Jacobite cause.

 

cully

cul ly |ˈkəlē ˈkəli | noun ( pl. cullies ) Brit. archaic, informal (often as a form of address ) a man; a friend. ORIGIN mid 17th cent. (denoting a person who is imposed upon ): of unknown origin.

 

Oxford Dictionary

cull

cull |kʌl | verb [ with obj. ] 1 reduce the population of (a wild animal ) by selective slaughter: some of the culled deer will be used for scientific research | (as noun culling ) : kangaroo culling. send (an inferior or surplus farm animal ) to be slaughtered. 2 select from a large quantity; obtain from a variety of sources: anecdotes culled from Greek and Roman history. archaic pick (flowers or fruit ): (as adj. culled ) : fresh culled daffodils. noun a selective slaughter of animals. an inferior or surplus livestock animal selected for culling. DERIVATIVES culler noun ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French coillier, based on Latin colligere (see collect 1 ).

 

Cullen, Countee

Cul len, Countee |ˈkələn ˈkələn | (1903 –46 ), US poet and prominent figure of the Harlem Renaissance. His works include Color (1925 ), The Black Christ (1929 ), and The Medea and Some Poems (1935 ).

 

Cullen skink

Cul ¦len skink |ˌkʌlən ˈskɪŋk | noun [ mass noun ] a Scottish soup made from smoked haddock, potatoes, onions, and milk. ORIGIN from the name of Cullen, a village on the Moray Firth in NE Scotland, + Scots skink soup made from shin of beef , probably from Middle Low German Schinke ham .

 

cullet

cullet |ˈkʌlɪt | noun [ mass noun ] recycled broken or waste glass used in glass-making. ORIGIN early 19th cent.: variant of collet, in the obsolete sense glass left on the blowing-iron when the finished article is removed .

 

Culloden, Battle of

Culloden, Battle of |kəˈlɒd (ə )n | the final engagement of the Jacobite uprising of 1745 –6, fought on a moor near Inverness, the last pitched battle on British soil. The Hanoverian army under the Duke of Cumberland crushed the small and poorly supplied Jacobite army of Charles Edward Stuart, and a ruthless pursuit after the battle effectively prevented any chance of saving the Jacobite cause.

 

cully

cully |ˈkʌli | noun ( pl. cullies ) archaic, informal (often as a form of address ) a man; a friend. ORIGIN mid 17th cent. (denoting a person who is imposed upon ): of unknown origin.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

cull

cull verb 1 anecdotes culled from Greek history: select, choose, pick, take, obtain, glean. 2 he sees culling deer as a necessity: kill, slaughter, destroy, harvest.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

cull

cull verb 1 anecdotes culled from Greek and Roman history: select, choose, pick, take, obtain, get, glean. 2 he sees culling deer as a necessity: slaughter, kill, destroy; reduce the numbers of, thin out the population of.

 

Duden Dictionary

Cullinan

Cul li nan Substantiv, maskulin , der |ˈkalinən |englisch ein großer Diamant

 

Spanish Dictionary

culle

culle nombre masculino Lengua precolombina de Perú .

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

cull

cull /kʌl /動詞 他動詞 1 かたく «…から » 情報 考えなど 〉を見つける, 選び取る, 収集する «from » .2 (数を減らすために )〈弱った動物など 〉を選んで殺す, 間引きする (out ).3 ⦅文 ⦆〈花 果実 〉を摘む .名詞 C 選別, 間引き ; 淘汰 とうた された動物 .

 

cullender

cul len der /kʌ́ləndə r /名詞 colander .