wool
See also: Wool
English

A sheep being shorn for its wool.
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
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /wʊl/
- (General American) enPR: wo͝ol, IPA(key): /wʊl/, [wʊ̠ɫ], [wɫ̩], [wəl]
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ʊl
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 the wool of sheep.
- 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 texture like that of 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 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
Derived terms
- abb-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
- philosopher's wool
- philosopher's wool
- philosophers' wool
- philosophical wool
- pig's wool
- polywool
- pull the wool over somebody's eyes
- pull the wool over someone's eyes
- rag wool
- rock wool
- rockwool
- 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
- wood-wool
- wood wool
- Wool Bay
- Wool Bay
- woolbroker
- woolclasser
- wool classer
- wool classing
- woolclassing
- wool clip
- woolcomb
- woolcomber
- wool comber
- 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
- woolhouse
- woolish
- woollen, woolen
- woolless
- woollike
- woolly, wooly
- woolman
- woolmonger
- wool moth
- wool oil
- woolpack
- woolpacker
- wool picker
- woolsack
- woolsedge
- woolshearer
- woolshearing
- woolshed
- woolskin
- wool sorter
- woolsorter
- woolsorting
- wool stapler
- woolstock
- 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.
Cornish
Tlingit
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