释义 |
coulter
coul·ter or col·ter C0682400 (kōl′tər)n. A blade or wheel attached to the beam of a plow that makes vertical cuts in the soil in advance of the plowshare. [Middle English culter, from Old English culter and Old French coltre, both from Latin culter, knife, plowshare; see skel- in Indo-European roots.]coulter (ˈkəʊltə) n (Agriculture) a blade or sharp-edged disc attached to a plough so that it cuts through the soil vertically in advance of the ploughshare. Also (esp US): colter [Old English culter, from Latin: ploughshare, knife]coul•ter (ˈkoʊl tər) n. colter. Coul•ter (ˈkoʊl tər) n. John Merle (mûrl), CoulterA flat steel disk about a foot in diameter attached, when needed, to the beam of a Walking turning plow to cut through grass and roots ahead of the plow-share and moldboard.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | coulter - a sharp steel wedge that precedes the plow and cuts vertically through the soilcoltermoldboard plow, mouldboard plough - plow that has a moldboardwedge - something solid that is usable as an inclined plane (shaped like a V) that can be pushed between two things to separate them |
coulter
coulter[′kōl·tər] (agriculture) colter coulter Related to coulter: Coulter counterSynonyms for coulternoun a sharp steel wedge that precedes the plow and cuts vertically through the soilSynonymsRelated Words- moldboard plow
- mouldboard plough
- wedge
|