单词 | culm |
释义 | culmn.1 1. Soot, smut. Obsolete exc. Scottish; = coom n.1 1. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > [noun] > grime, soot, or coal dirt sootc725 smitchc1330 culmc1440 coom1587 coal slack1612 grime1612 crock1657 fuliginosity1662 collow1675 smut1693 colly1708 smutch1791 brook1825 stokers1899 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > burning > products of burning > [noun] > soot sootc725 fuligo?a1425 soodc1430 culmc1440 coom1587 fuliginosity1662 collow1675 smut1693 colly1708 c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 108 Culme of smeke, fuligo. 1565 A. Golding tr. Ovid Fyrst Fower Bks. Metamorphosis ii. f. 4v Again the culme and smouldring smoke did wrap him round about. 1658 E. Phillips New World Eng. Words Culm, smoak or soot. 1708 J. Kersey Dict. Anglo-Britannicum Culm, (O[ld Word]) Smoak, or Soot. [Hence in Bailey etc. noted as Obs.]. 1847 H. Miller First Impressions Eng. iv. 52 A mud-coloured atmosphere of smoke and culm. 1861 ‘A. H. Clington’ Frank O'Donnell 171 My face and body all covered with culm..made him take me for the devil. 2. a. Coal-dust, small or refuse coal, slack. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] > small, refuse, impure, or coal-dust slackc1440 smith coal1466 smithy coal1482 coal dusta1529 panwood1531 smith's coal1578 kirving1599 culm1603 coom1611 small coal1643 smit1670 smut1686 slag1695 duff1724 duff coal1724 small1780 gum1790 stinking coal1803 cobbles1811 nubbling1825 stinkers1841 rubble1844 pea1855 nuts1857 nut coal1861 slap1865 burgee1867 smudge1883 waste1883 treble1901 coal smut1910 gumming1938 nutty slack1953 1348 in W. H. Stevenson Rec. Borough Nottingham (1882) I. 144 Praedictam dimidiam partem minerae carbonum marinorum et culmorum.] 1603 G. Owen Descr. Penbrokshire (1891) 70 In this kill first is made a fier of Coales or rather colme which is but the duste of the coales. 1603 G. Owen Descr. Penbrokshire (1891) 91 A smaler Ridle with which they drawe smale coales for the smythes from the colme which is in deede but verie dust, which serveth for lyme burninge. 1703 London Gaz. No. 3892/1 An Act for continuing the Duties upon Coles, Culm, and Cynders [= Coke]. 1770–4 A. Hunter Georgical Ess. (1803) III. 149 Culm, or small refuse coal. 1799 R. Kirwan Geol. Ess. 298 At Whitehaven, under a bed of common clay..a bed of natural clayey carbon or culm of 3 fathom is found. 1882 Brit. Q. Rev. Jan. 87 4s. per ton for culm, or coal-dust. b. Hence, spec. applied to the slack of anthracite or stone-coal, from the Welsh collieries, which was in common use for burning lime and drying malt. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] > small, refuse, impure, or coal-dust > specific type culm1736 red dog1922 1736 N. Bailey Dict. Domesticum 397. 1756 R. Pococke Trav. (1889) II. 188 The coals here [i.e. in Tenby]..run into culm, which they work up with clay, and make it into balls; it is very good fuel. 1769 Defoe's Tour Great Brit. (ed. 7) II. 366 The County of Pembroke abounds, particularly, in that Sort of Coal called Stone Coal, the small Pieces of which are stiled Culm. 1806 Martin in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 96 344. 1849 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 10 i. 149 Culm is the dust of the stone-coal, and is prepared for burning by being mixed with clay or mud from the shore. 1883 A. Williams Min. Resources U.S. 31 A mixture of anthracite slack, or ‘culm’, with bituminous coal. 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. Culm, the slack of non-bituminous or anthracite coal is known by no other name. c. By extension, sometimes employed as a synonym of anthracite, or of one of its varieties, the slaty glance coal. Also in plural culms, like coals. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] coal1253 sea-coal1253 pit-coal1483 cannel1541 earth coala1552 horse coal1552 Newcastle coal1552 stone-coal1585 cannel coal1587 parrot1594 burn-coal1597 lithanthrax1612 stony coal1617 Welsh coala1618 land-coala1661 foot coal1665 peacock coal1686 rough coal1686 white coal1686 heathen-coalc1697 coal-stone1708 round1708 stone-coal1708 bench-coal1712 slipper coal1712 black coal1713 culm1742 rock coal1750 board coal1761 Bovey coal1761 house coal1784 mineral coal1785 splint1789 splint coal1789 jet coal1794 anthracite1797 wood-coal1799 blind-coal1802 black diamond1803 silk-coal1803 glance-coal1805 lignite1808 Welsh stone-coal1808 soft1811 spout coals1821 spouter1821 Wallsend1821 brown coal1833 paper coal1833 steam-coal1850 peat-coal1851 cherry-coal1853 household1854 sinter coal1854 oil coal1856 raker1857 Kilkenny coal1861 Pottery coal1867 silkstone1867 block coal1871 admiralty1877 rattlejack1877 bunker1883 fusain1883 smitham1883 bunker coal1885 triping1886 trolley coal1890 kibble1891 sea-borne1892 jet1893 steam1897 sack coal1898 Welsh1898 navigation coal1900 Coalite1906 clarain1919 durain1919 vitrain1919 single1921 kolm1930 hards1956 the world > the earth > minerals > types of mineral > hydrocarbon minerals > [noun] > coal > anthracite culm1742 rock coal1750 anthracite1797 blind-coal1802 glance-coal1805 Kilkenny coal1861 1742 W. Ellis London & Country Brewer (ed. 4) I. 8 There is another Sort, by some wrongly called Coak, and rightly named Culm or Welch-coal, from Swanzey in Pembrokeshire, being of a hard stony Substance, in small Bits..and will burn without Smoak. 1839 J. R. McCulloch Statist. Acct. Brit. Empire (ed. 2) I. i. i. 77 The coal..on the western side being chiefly stone coal or culm, and on the eastern side, bituminous coking coal. 1841 Fossil Fuel, etc. (ed. 2) 336 Varieties of Anthracite (2) The slaty glance-coal..This is the anthracite so abundant in the United States; the culm* of our Welsh collieries. *(Note. This is a brittle crumbling anthracite.) 3. Geology. (More fully culm measures or series.) A name given by some geologists to a series of shales, sandstones, etc. containing, in places, thin beds of impure anthracite, which represent the Carboniferous series in North Devon; also to strata supposed to be the analogues of these elsewhere.The Culm series is generally considered to be contemporary with the Carboniferous limestone, but is much less rich in marine remains. It is extensively developed along the borders of Austria, Poland, and Russia; and includes the calp of Ireland. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > age or period > stratigraphic units > [noun] > primary or Palaeozoic > carboniferous spec. millstone grit1682 tumbler-beds1821 culm measures or series1836 Mississippian1893 Pennsylvanian1902 1808 C. Vancouver Gen. View Agric. Devon i. 54 Some years since a vein of culm appearing near the surface on the parish of Chittlehampton.] 1836 Sedgwick & Murchison in Brit. Assoc. Rep. (1837) V. (title) A classification of..Rocks..of Devonshire..On the true position of the Culm Deposits. 1837 Sedgwick & Murchison Trans. Geol. Soc. 5 670 The base of the culm series. 1837 Sedgwick & Murchison Trans. Geol. Soc. (note) 5 670 The undoubted culm-measures. 1839 H. T. De la Beche Rep. Geol. Cornwall 124 Anthracite, or culm, occurs in a few beds, of very variable thickness, between Greenacliff..and..Chittlehampton..The culm itself seems the result of irregular accumulations of vegetable matter intermingled with mud and sand. 1882 A. Geikie Text-bk. Geol. vi. iv. §2. 748. Π 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) at Brewing Dry it leisurely with Pit-coal, char'd, called in some places coak and in others Culm. [Anthracite is a natural coke.] Compounds† General attributive, as culm-dealer, culm-pit, etc. Π 1755 Gentleman's Mag. Oct. 447/2 There is also a culm pit, which was worked for fuel a few years ago. 1854 Illustr. London News 5 Aug. 118/3 Occupations of the People. Culm~dealer. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). culmn.2α. late Middle English commys (plural), late Middle English comys (plural), 1600s coom, 1600s–1700s come. β. 1700s caulm, 1800s– culm, 1900s– kaulm. γ. 1800s combe, 1800s–1900s comb, 1800s– coomb, 1800s– coombe Brit. /kuːm/, U.S. /kum/. Malting. A sprouted rootlet of a grain of barley or (rarely) other cereal (usually in plural); (as a mass noun) such rootlets collectively, esp. as a by-product of the malting process. Cf. malt-culms n.Carefully controlled germination of barley, to the point at which rootlets but not shoots (acrospires) are produced, is an important early stage of malting. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > malting > [noun] > germination > radicle culm1440 rootlet1803 α. β. 1794 M. Bower Let. 7 Jan. in R. Lowe Gen. View Agric. Nottingham 111 Malt caulm I have likewise used, and think it a good manure.1815 Farmer's Mag. 16 30 If when the bines first appear, they are eaten by slugs, a handful of malt culm, or saw-dust, is sometimes laid round each hill.1971 J. S. Hough et al. Malting & Brewing Sci. iv. 165 The dried rootlets, or culms, are removed from the malt after kilning and so constitute a by-product having a cash value of about half that of malt.2000 Grain & Feed Milling Technol. Oct. 22/3 The removal of culm and grading of finished malt requires particular care.2006 M. J. Lewis & C. W. Bamforth Ess. Brewing Sci. i. 5 At the end of malting the rootlets or culms are removed from malt kernels taking with them a significant amount of protein.γ. 1872 D. Oliver Lessons Elem. Bot. (new ed.) ii. 279 The sprouted radicles (called coombs or chives) are broken off and separated.1885 H. Stopes Malt & Malting xvii. 295 Malt-screens for separation of all combes and other matters, and also for grading.1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. at Combings In the process of malting each corn of barley grows a very distinct root..called combings or combs.1904 Jrnl. Soc. Chem. Industry 23 197/2 One the one hand is the coarse waste, consisting of husks, coombes, and dust.1918 Werribee Shire Banner 21 Nov. 1/3 With the completion of malting the combs or culms are removed, and form a valuable food.1953 Word for Word (Whitbread & Co.) 17/1 Culms (or Coombes), the rootlets which are sieved from the malt at the end of the malting process; they are used for poultry and cattle food.2004 D. E. Briggs et al. Brewing ii. 19 Rootlets (culms, coombes, cummins, malt sprouts) vary in their nature depending on what malt wheat they came from and in particular how strongly they were kilned. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 89 Comys, of malte [1499 Pynson commys], paululata. 1623 G. Markham Countrey Contentments, or Eng. Huswife (new ed.) i. v. 212 And so drie it with a gentle and soft fire.., till you finde it sufficiently well dryed, which you shall know both by the tast when you bite it in your mouth, & also by the falling off of the come or sprout. 1658 Sir T. Browne Garden of Cyrus iii, in Hydriotaphia: Urne-buriall 130 And so drye it with a gentle and soft fire..,till you finde it sufficiently well dryed, which you shall know both by the taste when you bite it in your mouth, and also by the falling off of the Come or sprout. 1682 N. Grew Anat. Plants i. i. 3 In Corn, it [sc. the Radicle] is that Part, which Malsters, upon its shooting forth, call the Come. a1796 S. Pegge Two Coll. Derbicisms (1896) 95 Comes, the sprutting or growing of the malt, which the hogs eat. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † culmn.3 Obsolete. rare. The highest point, summit, culminating point. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > high position > [noun] > highest point or top headOE copa1000 heightOE topc1000 highestlOE crest1382 coperounc1400 summita1425 summity?a1425 toppet1439 altitude?a1475 upperest1484 principala1533 pitcha1552 supremity1584 culm1587 period1595 spire1600 upward1608 cope1609 fastigium1641 vertex1641 culmen1646 supreme1652 tip-top1702 peak1785 helm1893 altaltissimo1975 the world > the universe > heavenly body > movement of heavenly bodies > [noun] > reach meridian > place of zenitha1640 culm1821 1587 T. Hughes Misfort. Arthur iii. iv, in W. C. Hazlitt Dodsley's Sel. Coll. Old Eng. Plays (1874) IV. 313 Who strives to stand..On giddy top and culm of slippery court. 1589 E. Hayes in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations iii. 688 The mountaines are..seldome uncouered of snow, in their culme & highest tops. 1821 Fair Witch of Glas Llyn in Tales of my Landlord New Ser. II. 146 Three times will they be raised against his life. At the third his star will have reached its culm. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2021). culmn.4 Botany. The stem of a plant; esp. the jointed and usually hollow stalk of grasses. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > stem or stalk > [noun] stealc700 stemc888 spirea1000 stalka1366 caulc1420 codd?1440 stalec1440 thighc1440 shank1513 pipe?1523 start?1523 spindle1577 leg1597 scape1601 haulm1623 caulicle1657 culm1657 thyrse1658 scapus1704 stemlet1838 stam1839 caulis1861 caulome1875 tige1900 1657 Physical Dict. Culms, stalks. 1794 T. Martyn tr. J. J. Rousseau Lett. Elements Bot. (ed. 4) xiii. 139 Meadow Fescue..has a culm two feet high. 1854 J. D. Hooker Himalayan Jrnls. I. iii. 70 A kind of reed work formed of long culms of Saccharum. Derivatives culm v. (intransitive) to form a culm. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > stem or stalk > have stem or stalk [verb (intransitive)] > develop stem pipe1770 culm1860 1860 Mayne Reid in Chambers's Jrnl. XIV. 1 The young maize..is rapidly culming upward. culmed adj. having a culm. ΚΠ 1862 H. D. Thoreau Excursions (1863) 223 A very tall and slender-culmed grass. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1c1440n.21440n.31587n.41657 |
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