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Webster 1913 Edition


Pell

Pell

(pĕl)
,
Verb.
T.
[Cf.
Pelt
,
Verb.
T.
]
To pelt; to knock about.
[Obs.]
Holland.

Pell

,
Noun.
[OF.
pel
, F.
peau
, L.
pellis
a skin. See
Fell
a skin.]
1.
A skin or hide; a pelt.
2.
A roll of parchment; a parchment record.
Clerk of the pells
,
formerly, an officer of the exchequer who entered accounts on certain parchment rolls, called pell rolls.
[Eng.]

Webster 1828 Edition


Pell

PELL

,
Noun.
[L. pellis.] A skin or hide.
Clerk of the pells, in England, an officer of the exchequer, who enters every teller's bill on the parchment rolls, the roll or receipts and the roll of disbursements.

Definition 2024


pell

pell

See also: Pëll and pell'

English

Noun

pell (plural pells)

  1. A fur or hide.
  2. A lined cloak or its lining.
  3. A roll of parchment; a record kept on parchment.
    • 1835, Frederick Devon (editor and translator), Issue Roll of Thomas de Brantingham, Bishop of Exeter, Lord High Treasurer of England, Containing Payments Made out of His Majesty′s Revenue in the 44th Year of King Edward III.: A.D. 1370, page xi,
      The clerk of the pell (whose office is in the Lord Treasurer′s gift) keepeth the Pells in parchment, called Pelles Receptæ, wherein every teller′s bill, with his name on it, is to be entred; and under every such bill when it is entred, recordatur to be written in open court, for a controlment to charge the teller with so much money as in the said bill is set downe.
      He also anciently kept another pell, called Pellis Exitus, wherein every dayes issuing of any the moneys paid into the receipt, was to be entered, and by whom and by what warrant, privy seale, or bill, it was paid.
  4. (Sussex) A body of water somewhere between a pond and a lake in size.
  5. An upright post, often padded and covered in hide, used to practice strikes with bladed weapons such as swords or glaives.

Derived terms

  • clerk of the pells

Related terms

Verb

pell (third-person singular simple present pells, present participle pelling, simple past and past participle pelled)

  1. To pelt; to knock about.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Holland to this entry?)

Breton

Adverb

pell

  1. far

Related terms

  • Welsh pell far

Catalan

Etymology

From Old Provençal, from Latin pellis, pellem, from Proto-Indo-European *pel- (to cover, wrap; skin, hide; cloth).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpeʎ/

Noun

pell f (plural pells)

  1. (anatomy) skin
  2. pelt

German

Verb

pell

  1. Imperative singular of pellen.
  2. (colloquial) First-person singular present of pellen.

Welsh

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pɛɬ/

Adjective

pell (feminine singular pell, plural pellafion, equative pelled, comparative pellach, superlative pellaf)

  1. far, distant

Mutation

Welsh mutation
radical soft nasal aspirate
pell bell mhell phell
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.