PLUCK vs CULL: NOUN
- The act of pulling and releasing a taut cord
- The trait of showing courage and determination in spite of possible loss or injury
- The lyrie.
- The pogge, Agonus cataphractus.
- Hence Heart; courage; spirit; determined energy; resolution in the face of difficulties.
- The heart, liver, and lungs or lights of a sheep, ox, or other animal used as butchers' meat: also used figuratively or humorously of the like parts of a human being.
- A bout; around.
- The act of plucking; a pull; a twitch.
- The heart, liver, and lights of an animal.
- Spirit; courage; indomitable resolution; fortitude.
- The act of plucking, or the state of being plucked, at college. See Pluck, v. t., 4.
- A blow; a stroke.
- A pull; a tug; a twitch; a snatch: as, he gave the sword a pluck.
- The heart, liver, windpipe, and lungs of a slaughtered animal.
- An instance of plucking
- The lungs, heart with trachea and often oesophagus removed from slaughtered animals.
- Guts, nerve, fortitude or persistence.
- Resourceful courage and daring in the face of difficulties; spirit.
- The act or an instance of plucking.
- A selection.
- An organised killing of selected animals.
- A fool, gullible person; a dupe.
- A cully; a dupe; a gull. See cully.
- A local English (Gloucestershire) name for the fish miller's-thumb.
- The person or thing rejected or set aside as inferior in quality
- Something picked out from others, especially something rejected because of inferior quality.
- A fool; a dupe.
- Something picked or culled out; specifically, an object selected from among a collection or aggregate, and placed on one side, or rejected, because of inferior quality: usually in the plural: as
- A piece unfit for inclusion within a larger group; an inferior specimen.
PLUCK vs CULL: VERB
- Pull or pull out sharply
- Sell something to or obtain something from by energetic and especially underhanded activity
- Look for and gather
- Rip off; ask an unreasonable price
- To pull or twitch sharply
- To play a string instrument pizzicato
- To rob, fleece, steal forcibly
- To remove feathers from a bird.
- To gently play a single string, e.g. on a guitar, violin etc.
- To pull something sharply; to pull something out
- Strip of feathers
- Pull lightly but sharply with a plucking motion
- To lay off in order to reduce the size of, get rid of.
- To kill (animals etc).
- To select animals from a group and then kill them in order to reduce the numbers of the group in a controlled manner.
- To pick or take someone or something (from a larger group).
- Look for and gather
- Remove something that has been rejected
PLUCK vs CULL: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To pull out the hair or feathers of.
- To remove abruptly or forcibly.
- To give an abrupt pull; tug.
- To sound (the strings of an instrument) by pulling and releasing them with the fingers or a plectrum.
- To give an abrupt pull to; tug at.
- To make a motion of pulling or twitching; -- usually with at.
- To remove or detach by grasping and pulling abruptly with the fingers; pick.
- N/A
PLUCK vs CULL: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To gather up; to summon.
- To pull or tear off.
- To pull down; to demolish; to reduce to a lower state.
- To pull away, or to separate by pulling; to tear away.
- To reject at an examination for degrees.
- To strip of, or as of, feathers.
- Especially, to pull with sudden force or effort, or to pull off or out from something, with a twitch; to twitch; also, to gather, to pick
- To pull; to draw.
- To remove rejected members or parts from (a herd, for example).
- To gather; collect.
- To pick out from others; select.
- To separate, select, or pick out; to choose and gather or collect.
PLUCK vs CULL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To summon or muster up: as, to pluck up courage, spirit, etc.
- Intrans., to collect one's self; gather spirit or courage.
- To strip, as a fowl, by pulling off its feathers; strip the feathers from: as, to pluck a fowl.
- Especially To pull sharply; pull with sudden force or jerk; give a tugor twitch to; twitch; snatch; twang, as the strings of a harp or guitar.
- To pull; draw; drag: used either literally or figuratively.
- To pull off, as feathers from a fowl, or fruit or flowers from a plant; pick off; gather; pick or cull, as berries or flowers.
- In geology, to break off easily in large pieces, as granite. See plucking.
- To pull sharply, as if at the folds of a skirt: used with at.
- In geology, to pry off or tear away, as blocks of rock from the lee side of cliffs or projections, or more moderate slopes: said of the action of moving ice, as in glaciers. See plucking.
- To reject, after a university or other examination, as not coming up to the required standard.
- Ask an unreasonable price
- Rip off
- To gather; pick; collect.
- To pick out; select or separate one or more of from others: often with out.
- To inspect and measure, as timber.
- A Middle English form of kill.
- A variant of coll.
PLUCK vs CULL: RELATED WORDS
- Fleece, Tear, Tweak, Roll, Gazump, Hook, Rob, Hustle, Soak, Plunk, Cull, Pluckiness, Gutsiness, Pick, Pull
- Eliminate, Scrapping, Scrap, Felling, Massacre, Cutting, Shoot, Eradicate, Hunting, Hunt, Slaughtering, Slaughter, Pick, Reject, Pluck
PLUCK vs CULL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Deplume, Pick off, Pull off, Plume, Overcharge, Fleece, Tear, Tweak, Roll, Gazump, Hook, Soak, Plunk, Pick, Pull
- Disposal, Killing, Eliminate, Scrapping, Scrap, Felling, Massacre, Cutting, Shoot, Eradicate, Hunting, Hunt, Slaughter, Pick, Reject
PLUCK vs CULL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- What happens when you pluck the rubber bands?
- SYN: Twitch, pluck, pull, catch, grasp, gripe, clutch.
- Then pluck turns giving each other spa services.
- Do pluck it softly fur tliat shepheards sake.
- My remedy is then to pluck it out.
- Pluck up your spirit, Jon, and break away.
- My remedy is, then, to pluck it out.
- Pluck, the free Web organizer software at pluck.com, can also handle RSS feeds.
- Nisua, A pluck, or calfs pluck, Exta vitu.
- To pluck, or give one a pluck, Velio, vcllico.
- Rowley, David, Harrison, Cull, John Williams, Jackson and Oliver.
- It meant to thresh, pulverise, separate, purify, cull, pick.
- Cull three good articles from each and examine them.
- Aaronson NK, Cull AM, Kaasa S, Spranger MAG.
- Sprangers MA, Cull A, Groenvold M, et al.
- Bruce D, Davis W, Cull C, et al.
- Autophagy, which IF promotes, helps cull cellular waste.
- Terry Notary in the Battle of Wakanda, cull.
- CUll now enjoy Hawaii with their guide dogs.
- Cull Payments: the Cull Payments as set out in the relevant Lease Agreement.
PLUCK vs CULL: QUESTIONS
- What does the Bible say about pluck grain on Sabbath?
- What happens if you pluck multiple hairs from your head?
- How do you pluck without pressing down on guitar frets?
- What does the Bible say about pluck up and destroy?
- What does it mean when someone says you have pluck?
- Why do people pluck grass blades to watch the wind?
- How do you pluck a pheasant without ripping it open?
- Is it illegal to pluck roadside plants in Singapore?
- Do Dallas BBQs pluck the feathers from their wings?
- Can I pluck my hair between electrolysis treatments?
- Are cull coins a good investment for your coin collection?
- Are concentrate diets a problem when feeding cull ewes?
- What is a cull condition Morgan silver dollar coin?
- How long will BC extend its controversial wolf cull?
- Why is Florida trying to cull pythons from Everglades?
- Do feral horses experience suffering during a horse cull?
- How to use the component cull duplicates in AutoCAD?
- Are wild boars already contributing to the Rome cull?
- Which celebrities are protesting against the shark cull?
- Should South Australia cull koalas on Kangaroo Island?