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wool
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Wool
English
Etymology
From Middle English wolle, from Old English wull, from Proto-West Germanic *wullu, from Proto-Germanic *wullō, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂wĺ̥h₁neh₂.
Cognates
The vowel development u → o → oo is purely graphical. Modern English generally avoids the string ⟨wu⟩ in favour of ⟨wo⟩, and the resulting woll was then altered to wool (as supposedly better representing the pronunciation).
Pronunciation
Noun
wool (usually uncountable, plural wools)
- The hair of the sheep, llama and some other ruminants.
- 2006, Nigel Guy Wilson, Ancient Greece, page 692:
- The sheep were caught and plucked, because shears had not yet been invented to cut the wool from the sheep's back.
- A cloth or yarn made from such hair.
- 2009 January 12, Mireya Navarro, “It May Market Organic Alternatives, but Is Your Cleaner Really Greener?”, in New York Times:
- Spielvogel said wet cleaning also has limitations; while it is fine for cottons and fabrics worn in warm climates, he said, it can damage heavy wools or structured clothes like suit jackets.
- Anything with a fibrous texture like that of sheep's wool.
- Hyponyms: cotton wool; wood wool; mineral wool, rockwool, glass wool; wire wool, aluminum wool, brass wool, steel wool
- 1975, Anthony Julian Huxley, Plant and Planet, page 223:
- The groundsels have leaves covered in wool for insulation […]
- A fine fiber obtained from the leaves of certain trees, such as firs and pines.
- (obsolete) Short, thick hair, especially when crisped or curled.
- c. 1606 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Macbeth”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act IV, scene i]:
- wool of bat and tongue of dog
- (British, New Zealand) Yarn, including that made from synthetic fibers.
- (Liverpool, derogatory) A woolly back; a resident of a satellite town outside Liverpool, such as St Helens or Warrington. See also Yonner.
- (slang) A marijuana cigarette or cigar laced with crack cocaine.
- 1991 March 29, “Slow Down” (0:25 from the start), in One for All, performed by Brand Nubian:
- The object of your affection is the treetop connection / Where basically you love to smoke your wools
- 2003 June 24, “Sabotage” (0:40 from the start), in The Ownerz, performed by Gang Starr:
- He rocked Caesar's chains, he pushed Caesar's Range / Smokin' mad wools all day, with Caesar's change
Hyponyms
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
- abb-wool
- all cry and no wool
- all wool and a yard wide
- andalusian wool
- angora wool
- breech wool
- bullswool
- burry wool
- cony wool
- cotton-wool
- cotton wool
- cotton wool ball
- cotton wool bud
- darning wool
- dead pulled wool
- dewool
- dyed in the wool
- dyed-in-the-wool
- dye in the wool
- feather wool
- fleece wool
- gather wool
- glass wool
- go to the goat's house for wool
- great cry and little wool
- ice wool
- kaowool
- lambswool
- longwool
- meat wool
- mestizo wool
- milk wool
- mineral wool
- more cry than wool
- much cry and little wool
- nonwool
- philosophers' wool
- philosopher's wool
- philosophical wool
- pig's wool
- polywool
- pull the wool over somebody's eyes
- pull the wool over someone's eyes
- rag wool
- rockwool
- rock wool
- salamander's wool
- scoured wool
- seed wool
- Shetland wool
- shorn wool
- shortwool
- skin wool
- slut's wool
- steel-wool
- steel wool
- thibet wool
- underwool
- virgin wool
- warm as wool
- waste of wool
- wire wool
- wolf in wool
- wood wool
- wood-wool
- Wool Bay
- woolbroker
- woolclasser
- wool classer
- wool classing
- woolclassing
- wool clip
- woolcomb
- wool comber
- woolcomber
- woolcombing
- wooldriver
- wool-dyed
- wooled
- wool-fat
- wool fat
- woolfell
- wool-gather
- woolgathering
- wool-gathering
- woolgrass
- wool grease
- woolgrower
- woolgrowing
- woolhall
- woolhat
- woolhead
- wool-headed
- wool-hole
- woolhouse
- woolish
- woollen, woolen
- woolless
- woollike
- woolly, wooly
- woolman
- woolmonger
- wool moth
- wool oil
- woolpack
- woolpacker
- wool-pated
- wool picker
- woolsack
- woolsedge
- woolshearer
- woolshearing
- woolshed
- woolskin
- woolsorter
- wool sorter
- woolsorting
- wool stapler
- woolstock
- woolstuff
- woolulose
- woolward
- woolwasher
- wool wax
- woolwear
- woolwinder
- woolwork
- woolworker
- woolworking
- woolworks
Descendants
- → Japanese: ウール (ūru)
Translations
hair of sheep, etc.
|
cloth or yarn
|
References
- “wool”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- “wool”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
- “wool”, in The Right Rhymes, launched 2013.
Further reading
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Cornish
Noun
wool
- soft mutation of gool
Tlingit
Noun
wool
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