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Wool   /wʊl/   Listen
noun
Wool  n.  
1.
The soft and curled, or crisped, species of hair which grows on sheep and some other animals, and which in fineness sometimes approaches to fur; chiefly applied to the fleecy coat of the sheep, which constitutes a most essential material of clothing in all cold and temperate climates. Note: Wool consists essentially of keratin.
2.
Short, thick hair, especially when crisped or curled. "Wool of bat and tongue of dog."
3.
(Bot.) A sort of pubescence, or a clothing of dense, curling hairs on the surface of certain plants.
Dead pulled wool, wool pulled from a carcass.
Mineral wool. See under Mineral.
Philosopher's wool. (Chem.) See Zinc oxide, under Zinc.
Pulled wool, wool pulled from a pelt, or undressed hide.
Slag wool. Same as Mineral wool, under Mineral.
Wool ball, a ball or mass of wool.
Wool burler, one who removes little burs, knots, or extraneous matter, from wool, or the surface of woolen cloth.
Wool comber.
(a)
One whose occupation is to comb wool.
(b)
A machine for combing wool.
Wool grass (Bot.), a kind of bulrush (Scirpus Eriophorum) with numerous clustered woolly spikes.
Wool scribbler. See Woolen scribbler, under Woolen, a.
Wool sorter's disease (Med.), a disease, resembling malignant pustule, occurring among those who handle the wool of goats and sheep.
Wool staple, a city or town where wool used to be brought to the king's staple for sale. (Eng.)
Wool stapler.
(a)
One who deals in wool.
(b)
One who sorts wool according to its staple, or its adaptation to different manufacturing purposes.
Wool winder, a person employed to wind, or make up, wool into bundles to be packed for sale.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Wool" Quotes from Famous Books



... on wool, neither the comb nor the wool was charged; both had just the usual number of electrons. But when you rubbed them together, you rubbed some of the electrons off the wool on to the comb. Then the comb had a negative charge; that is, it had too many ...
— Common Science • Carleton W. Washburne

... on each side of the road, and every sheep that approached the thorns was sure to be robbed of some part of its wool, which a good deal displeased little Gregory. "Only see, papa," said he, "how the sheep are deprived of their wool by those bushes! You have often told me, that God makes nothing in vain; but these briars seem only made for mischief; people should therefore join to destroy ...
— The Looking-Glass for the Mind - or Intellectual Mirror • M. Berquin

... has proved entirely satisfactory. It is worked by two sturdy wethers who are harbored in a pleasant house and run, close to the power-house, and who pay for their food by the sweat of their brows and the wool from their backs. They do not appear to dislike the "demnition grind," which lasts but an hour twice a day; they go without reluctance to the tramp that leads nowhere, and the futile journey which would seem foolish to anything wiser than a sheep. This sheep-power is one of the curios of ...
— The Fat of the Land - The Story of an American Farm • John Williams Streeter

... her work as she spoke, she made her wheel go faster than before; and I gazed with admiration at her deft fingering of the wool, from which the thread flowed in a continuous line, as if it had been something plastic, towards ...
— Ranald Bannerman's Boyhood • George MacDonald

... a good deal of unglazed but polished red pottery. The forms are chiefly candle-sticks, censers and toys. Much weaving of palm is here done, and the hats of the place are rather famous. Famous, too, are the mantas, or women's dresses, of black wool, made in long rectangular pieces. The common grade sells for $6.00, and in using it, it is, like indian dresses generally, simply wrapped about the figure and held in place ...
— In Indian Mexico (1908) • Frederick Starr


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