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单词 fell
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felln.1

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/
Forms: Old English–1600s fel, Old English– fell, Middle English ffel, Middle English ffelle, Middle English uel, Middle English uelle, Middle English vel, Middle English velle, Middle English–1600s felle, 1600s ffell.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian fel (West Frisian fel ), Old Saxon fel (Middle Low German vel ), Old Dutch fel (Middle Dutch vel , Dutch vel ), Old High German fel (Middle High German vel , German Fell ), Old Icelandic -fjall (only in the compound berfjall bearskin), all in senses ‘skin’ (up to the early modern period denoting both animal and human skin, later only the former) and ‘hide’, Old Swedish fiäl , fiäll , fiäld scale of a fish (Swedish fjäll also denoting a scale of a bird), Gothic -fill (only in the compounds þrutsfill ‘leprosy’ and faurafilli ‘foreskin’) < the same Indo-European base (with assimilation of the -n- suffix) as ancient Greek πέλλα , classical Latin pellis skin, Old Church Slavonic pelena swaddling cloth, (with different ablaut grade in the root: zero-grade) Russian plena membrane, Czech plena swaddling cloth, membrane, Old Prussian pleynis , Lithuanian plėnė , both in sense ‘membrane’, and (with different suffix) film n.
1.
a. The skin or hide of an animal along with the hair, wool, etc. Cf. fellmonger n. Now rare and poetic.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > skin or hide > skin with hair attached or fur > [noun] > a pelt or fur
felleOE
pelt1303
pell1404
eOE Leechbk. (Royal) (1865) iii. xl. 334 Nim mereswines fel, wyrc to swipan.
OE Beowulf (2008) 2088 Sio [glof] wæs orðoncum eall gegyrwed deofles cræftum ond dracan fellum.
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Cambr. Gg.3.28) i. 183 God him worhte ða reaf of fellum, & hi wæron mid þam fellum gescrydde.
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 201 Ðe neddre bileued hire hude baften hire and cumeð newe fel and hie wurð jung.
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) l. 830 (MED) Þe uox..Ne kan..hine so bi þenche..Þat he ne lost his rede uel.
a1300 (c1275) Physiologus (1991) 102 For his fel he [sc. serpent] ðer leteð.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 210 Zuych difference ase þer is be-tuene..þe uelle and þe beste.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 5083 Sum fellis of fischis.
c1475 (c1399) Mum & Sothsegger (Cambr. Ll.4.14) (1936) iii. l. 24 Þe herte..fedith him on þe venym, his felle to anewe.
1480 Table Prouffytable Lernynge (Caxton) (1964) 18 Of shepes fellis.
1551 R. Robinson tr. T. More Vtopia sig. Kiiiiv They carry furthe..purple die felles.
1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 683 They be barbarous people, who clad themselves with the felles and skinnes of sheepe.
1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion vii. 104 Her Wooll whose Staple doth excell..the golden Phrygian Fell.
1713 W. Bedell Protestant Memorial 7 Cloathed in Fells of Sheep.
1757 J. Dyer Fleece ii. 47 In loose locks of fells she most delights.
1834 T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus i. viii. 19/2 The Horse I ride has his own whole fell.
1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. IV 6 A lion's skin..So wrought with gold that the fell showed but dim Betwixt the threads.
1955 E. Pound Classic Anthol. i. 61 Bow-case of tiger's fell, graved lorica.
1975 R. Graves Coll. Poems xiv. 247 When I was a lion of tawny fell, You stroked my mane and you combed it well.
b. The skin or hide of an animal, esp. a sheep, as distinguished from the hair, wool, etc. Obsolete.Recorded earliest in bookfell n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > skin or hide > [noun] > as distinguished from hair
fellOE
OE Ælfric Gloss. (St. John's Oxf.) 304 Pergamenum uel membranum, bocfel.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 307 Felles wel itauwet.
a1325 Statutes of Realm in MS Rawl. B.520 f. 54v (MED) Þe custume of wolle ant of velles And of hydene bi foreseid.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xviii. xxiv. 1164 Þe vse of geet and of scheep [printed scheeþ] is nedeful..for he..cloþiþ þe naked wiþ felle and wiþ wolle.
a1450 ( Libel Eng. Policy (Laud) in T. Wright Polit. Poems & Songs (1861) II. 168 Of Scotlonde the commoditees Ar ffelles, hydes, and of wolle the ffleesse.
c1475 (?c1300) Guy of Warwick (Caius) l. 4794 (MED) Of Guyes felawes shull we telle As y fynde in this perchemyn felle.
1581 Compendious Exam. Certayne Ordinary Complaints ii. f. 25 Of our felles they make spanish skinnes, Gloues and Gerdels.
1615 T. Adams Lycanthropy 20 in Blacke Devill His fell good, his fleece good, his flesh good.
1719 in T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth V. 294 Wool, New pull'd from tanned Fells.
c. In proverbs. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry V f. lxxvii The old prouerbe..whiche saieth: If shepe ronne wilfully emongest Wolves thei shall lese ether life or fell.
1579 S. Gosson Schoole of Abuse f. 2 The Woolfe iettes in weathers felles.
2.
a. Human skin. Also figurative. In later use only as an extended use of sense 1. Obsolete.Frequently in phrases, often contrasted with flesh (cf. phrases at flesh n. 1c), or with the sense ‘life or personal safety’ (cf. phrases at skin n. Phrases 1c).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > skin > [noun]
swardc725
fellOE
hidea1000
leather1303
skina1325
rinda1413
swarth?c1450
swadc1460
thackc1480
skin coat1589
hackle1609
flesha1616
pelta1626
integument1664
barka1758
exoskeleton1839
OE Cynewulf Juliana 591 Næs hyre wloh ne hrægl, ne feax ne fel fyre gemæled, ne lic ne leoþu.
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xxxv. 482 Eft ic beo mid minum felle befangen, & on minum flæsce ic geseo God.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 8591 I fell & flæsh. wiþþ utenn dæþ.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 98 Nis þer bute sone awarpe þet ruchȝe fel abute þe heorte.
c1300 St. Francis (Laud) l. 433 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 66 He drouȝ to-ward þe deþe... On him nas nouȝt bote fel and bon bi-leued atþe laste.
?c1335 in W. Heuser Kildare-Gedichte (1904) 90 Þou ert prute, man, of þi fleisse Oþir of þi velle þat is wiþ oute.
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1876) VI. 247 An evel þat was bytwene vel [a1425 Harl. fel, 1482 Caxton fell] and flesche.
c1410 (c1350) Gamelyn (Harl. 7334) l. 76 (MED) He..leet his londes forfare..And seþþen he it abought on his faire fel.
?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 6076 In synnes, in Ioyntes, in fell, and flessh.
1606 P. Holland tr. Suetonius Hist. Twelve Caesars 239 That kind of dropsy wherein water runneth between the fell and the flesh.
1834 T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus i. v. 14/1 The rest of his body sheeted in its thick natural fell.
1890 H. M. Stanley in Times 6 May A light brown fell stood out very clearly.
b. A membrane covering an inner organ of the body; (also) a membrane covering the fetus. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Deut. xxviii. 57 Þe fulþe of þe lytul fellys [a1425 Corpus Oxf. fellis; a1425 L.V. skynnes] þat goon out fro þe myddul of þe hupys of here.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. vii. v. 348 An hote posteme in certeyne skynnes and felles of þe brayne.
1561 J. Hollybush tr. H. Brunschwig Most Excellent Homish Apothecarye f. 19v The celles or felles that enuiron the harte.
c. The flesh immediately beneath the skin. Sc. National Dict. (1956) records this sense as still in use in Dumfriesshire in 1952.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > bodily substance > flesh > [noun] > exposed
fell1559
raw flesh1611
raw1823
the world > life > the body > bodily substance > flesh > [noun] > immediately under skin
fell1559
1559 W. Baldwin et al. Myrroure for Magistrates Gloucester xiii She haply with her nayles may claw hym to the fell.
1567 G. Turberville Epitaphes, Epigrams f. 108v Augmenting still his secret sore by piercing fell and skin.
1787 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 216 See, how she peels the skin an' fell, As ane were peelin onions!
1817 Lintoun Green in R. Brown Comic Poems 91 He'd singed the sheep's heads to the fell, Tae mak' the sheep-head kale.
1899 Proc. Philos. Soc. Glasgow 31 39 The fell is the deep fascia, a deep-seated pain being talked of as ‘betwixt the fell and the flesh’.
1923 G. Watson Roxburghshire Word-bk. 128 Fell, the cutis, derm, or under-skin in sheep, etc.
3. A covering of hair, wool, etc., esp. when thick and matted; a fleece. Often in a fell of hair: a head or shock of hair. Also in extended use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > hair > hair of head > [noun]
lockeOE
faxc900
hairc1000
hairc1000
headOE
topc1275
toppingc1400
peruke1548
fleece1577
crine1581
head of hair1587
poll1603
a fell of haira1616
thatcha1634
maidenhair1648
chevelure1652
wool1697
toupet1834
nob-thatch1846
barnet1857
toss1946
the world > animals > mammals > [noun] > parts of > coat
fella1616
pelage1734
the world > life > the body > hair > types of hair > [noun] > bushy or thick
bush1509
hair-bush1580
bush-heada1603
shag1607
fella1616
mop1616
bush-hair1692
hassock1754
mopheada1816
shock-head1817
shock1819
flock-hair1878
tousle1880
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) iii. ii. 52 We are still handling our Ewes, and their Fels you know are greasie. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) v. v. 11 My Fell of haire Would at a dismall Treatise rowze, and stirre As life were in't. View more context for this quotation
a1641 J. Smyth Berkeley MSS (1883) I. 162 A Sheepskyn accordinge to the growth of the fell.
1842 N. A. Woods Tour Canada 14 Their flat Tartar features half hidden under a fell of coarse, unkempt hair.
1848 J. R. Lowell Poems 2nd Ser. 11 The surly fell of Ocean's bristled neck!
1872 J. R. Lowell in N. Amer. Rev. July 169 (note) Reason (Virgil) first carries him down by clinging to the fell of Satan.
1910 A. Rives Pan's Mountain xxxi. 276 A thick fell of snow wrapped the Sasso di Ferro.
1954 G. Lannestock tr. V. Moberg Unto Good Land i. vi. §5 59 From their train they saw vast fields covered with a thick fell of beautiful crops.
1979 R. M. Anderson Hispanic Costume 1480–1530 115/1 The least expensive pelt-lined wear of our period was the zamarro made of fine, soft sheep fells.
1994 ‘E. Peters’ Brother Cadfael's Penance iv. 71 A thick fell of light brown hair hiding his face.

Compounds

fell-ill n. Scottish Obsolete rare the condition (in cattle) of being hidebound (see hidebound adj. 1); cf. hidebound n.
ΚΠ
1798 R. Douglas Gen. View Agric. Roxburgh & Selkirk 149 Aged cattle..are liable to be hide bound, a disease known here..by the name of the fell-ill.
1878 J. Britten & R. Holland Dict. Eng. Plant-names 177 Jamieson refers to a plant which was ‘viewed as a specific in the disease of cattle called the fellin’, but does not explain what that disease was, unless we suppose it to be the same as fell-ill.
fell-poak n. Scottish Obsolete waste clippings or parings resulting from the preparation of skins, and used for manure; cf. poak n.
ΚΠ
1795 J. Gretton in Outl. 15th Chapter Proposed Gen. Rep. (Board Agric.) Addenda 32 Get your fell-poake on your head-land by the latter end of October.
fell-rot n. Scottish Obsolete a disease (perhaps a form or stage of liver-fluke infestation) affecting the skin or fleece of sheep; cf. rot n.1 3 and pelt-rot n. at pelt n.1 Compounds 2.
ΚΠ
1807 Prize Ess. & Trans. Highland Soc. Scotl. 3 465 Others speak of many different kinds of rot, and distinguish them by different names, as the cor- or heart-rot, the fell-rot, the bone-rot, and other rots; but Mr. Beattie and other intelligent farmers, are of opinion, that all the different appearances in the body of the animal, are but different symptoms of the same disease.
1878 J. Britten & R. Holland Dict. Eng. Plant-names 177 He [sc. Jamieson] also mentions fell-rot.
fell-ware n. Obsolete animal skins or hides as merchandise.
ΚΠ
1367 Close Roll, 41 Edward III (P.R.O.: C 54/205) m. 21v Mercandisas vocatas ffelware.
c1475 (c1399) Mum & Sothsegger (Cambr. Ll.4.14) (1936) iii. l. 150 (MED) Furris of foyne and oþer felle-whare.
1690 W. Atwood Apol. E.-India Company 19 Edward the third commanded that no Merchant Denizen should transport..Coals, Sea Stones Fell-Ware, &c. to other Places than Calais.
fell wool n. [compare skin wool n. at skin n. Compounds 5] wool that has been pulled from a sheepskin, rather than shorn from a live animal; cf. fellmonger n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > wool > [noun] > type of > from sheep > from dead sheep
pelt wool1341
pell wool1404
morling1448
skin wool1495
fell wool1677
slipe1856
c1490 in F. B. Bickley Little Red Bk. Bristol (1900) II. 124 To weue any Brodemede or other cloth made of any other stuff than oonly of flees woll or fell woll.
1551–2 Act 5 & 6 Edward VI c. 6 §1 in Statutes of Realm (1963) IV. i. 136 Myngelinge Fell Wooll and Lambes Wooll..with Fleese Wooll.
1677 R. Plot Nat. Hist. Oxford-shire 278 This Fell wool they separate into five or six sorts.
1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. Fell-wool, the wool pulled from sheep-skins in distinction from the [vleez-èol] shorn from the living animal.
2005 Shakespeare Q. 56 424 Glovers, drawn into the trade by profits from the sale of fell wool—wool plucked from the skins purchased for glove manufacture.
fell wound n. Obsolete a scar.
ΚΠ
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Jer. xxx. 17 Y schal helen parfitly thi felle wounde [L. vulneribus tuis] to thee.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Lev. xiii. 19 In þe place of þe bogge apereþ afel wounde [L. cicatrix].
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

felln.3

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/
Forms: Middle English–1500s felle, Middle English– fell, 1500s–1600s fel.
Origin: A borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: < early Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic fjall, Old Swedish fiäl (Swedish fjäll), Old Danish feld (Danish fjæld, fjeld), all in senses ‘mountain’ and ‘elevated stretch of land’, in Danish also in sense ‘rock’), probably (with consonantal assimilation *-lz- > -ll-) < a different ablaut grade of the same Germanic base as Old High German felis, fels rock, cliff, large stone (Middle High German vels, German Fels rock) < a different ablaut grade (o-grade) of the same Indo-European base as (with zero-grade) Early Irish all cliff.Further etymology. Although ancient Greek πέλλα stone (in a gloss in Hesychius) is often cited as a further cognate, it is likely that it is a borrowing from a non-Indo-European language. A suggested relationship of the (suffixed) Sanskrit pāṣāṇa ‘stone’ with the Germanic and Celtic forms is also uncertain. An alternative suggestion that the German noun may reflect a pre-Indo-European substrate word is now considered unlikely. In support of this suggestion, Middle Dutch (rare) vels ‘rock’ and Old Saxon felis , filis , Middle Low German vels ‘rock, large stone’ have sometimes been taken as cognates of the Old High German noun, but two of them are now generally considered to show borrowings from various stages of German (the Old Saxon noun from Old High German, the Middle Low German noun probably via Luther's translation of the Bible), and this is also possible for the rare Middle Dutch noun. Use in place names. Both the sense ‘mountain, hill’ and the sense ‘elevated stretch of uncultivated land’ occur in topographical names. Sense 1 occurs in proper names of hills especially in the north-west of England, as Bowfell, Scafell, etc.:1673 R. Blome Britannia 132 Amongst which Hills these are of chief note, viz. Furness Fells, Riving Pike, and Pendle Hill.1738 Defoe's Tour Great Brit. (ed. 2) III. 190 This Derwent is famous for its springing out of those Hills called Derwent Fells.1827 R. Southey Select. from Lett. (1856) IV. 369 A day in London is more wearying to me than a walk up Scawfell.1872 H. I. Jenkinson Guide Eng. Lake District (1879) 218 Between Esk Hause and Bow Fell is a mountain called Hanging Knott, which can be scaled from the top of the Hause in about twenty minutes.1888 C. T. Clough Geol. Cheviot Hills i. 2 The highest point is the Cheviot, 2,676 feet above the sea level. After this come, in order, Hedgehope, 2,348 feet; Comb Fell, 2,132 feet, [etc.].1905 S. J. Weyman Starvecrow Farm 209 And now the screes of Bow Fell, flecked with snow, were not more cold and hard than her face.1996 Guardian 4 Jan. 11/1 He yearned to lead the crux pitch of Central Buttress on Scafell.Sense 2 occurs in place names, especially in the north-east of England, but also elsewhere (quot. 1795 refers to the Campsie Fells in Scotland; quot. 1921 to a nature reserve in Massachusetts):1795 Statist. Acct. Stirlingshire XV. 327 (Jam.) Then 15 strata of muirstone rise above each other to the summit of the Fells..in the face of the braes, they go by the name of dasses or gerrocks.1827 E. Mackenzie Descr. & Hist. Acct. Newcastle I. 2 Here commenced one of the great military roads of the Romans, which, passing Gateshead Fell, proceeded to Chester in the Street.1921 F. S. Mathews Field Bk. Wild Birds & their Music (rev. ed.) 195 The last time I saw him he was wagging his tail in a tree by the roadside in the Middlesex Fells. Early use in surnames. Earlier currency is probably implied by use as a surname in northern counties of England, e.g. Rob. del Fel, Henr. del fel (both 1277–8), Roger del Fel (1318), all from Cumberland, Thoma del Fell', Johannes del Fell' (both 1379, Westmoreland and Lancashire).
Chiefly British.
1. A hill, a mountain, (in later use) esp. one in the north-west of England.Also (and now chiefly) in topographical names in the north-west of England: see etymological note.Not always clearly distinguishable from sense 2, but (now esp. in the context of hill walking) generally applied to a named prominence which may be distinguished from its surroundings, even in an upland area.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > hill or mountain > [noun]
mounteOE
hillc1000
fella1400
month1477
range1601
morro1826
jebel1844
a1400 (c1300) Northern Homily: Serm. on Gospels (Coll. Phys.) in Middle Eng. Dict. at Fel Crist com dunward of a felle [L. de monte].
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 6461 Moyses went vp-on þat fell, And fourti dais can þer-on duell.
?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 64 Thurgh þe straytes of mountaynes and felles.
1543 Chron. J. Hardyng f. ciiv His graue is yet..vpon the fell.
a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) III. l. 57049 With clarions..Quhomeof the sound did found attouir the fell.
1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. i. 755 High topped hilles and huge fels standing thicke together.
1701 R. Morden New Descr. & State of Eng. 84 Here are the high Fells, call'd by the name of Fourness Fells.
1899 Cent. Mag. Aug. 584 On all sides the horizon was bounded by snow-clad fells, whose peaks were gilded by the evening sun.
1906 E. Adams-Ray tr. Sweden 177 Beyond the far-stretching moor-land and forest rises a snowy chain of fells, in bold, defiant outlines.
2009 O. Berry Lake District (Lonely Planet) 220 While the Lakeland fells lack the stature of many of the world's larger mountains, they are certainly not without their dangers.
2. An elevated stretch of uncultivated land, typically treeless and sometimes used for pasture; a moorland ridge or down, now chiefly one in the north of England and parts of Scotland. In poetic contexts formerly often coupled with frith (also firth): see frith n.2 1.Usually referring to unenclosed land, but with quot. 1786 cf.
1787 R. Burns Poems (new ed.) Gloss. 352/1 Fell, a field pretty level on the side or top of a hill.
Also in topographical names, esp. in the north-east of England: see etymological note.
Not always clearly distinguishable from sense 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > wild or uncultivated land > [noun] > moor or heath
mooreOE
moorlandeOE
heathOE
fella1400
burgh-moorc1600
rosland1704
heath-land1819
wallum1965
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 7697 In frith and fell, Saul soght dauid for to quell.
c1440 (a1400) Awntyrs Arthure (Thornton) l. 50 (MED) Þay questede and quellys By frythis and fellis.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 4046 (MED) [They] won..in dennes vndire dounes..bath þar bridis & þar barnes with bestes on þe fellis.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) I. 191 Where nyght fallys on you, loke ye there abyde, be hit felle other towne.
1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. ej Wheresoeuer ye fare by fryth or by fell.
c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) vi. 53 The laif of ther fat flokkis follouit on the fellis.
1562 W. Turner 2nd Pt. Herball f. 57 Feniculum..groweth in..wild mores, called felles.
1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion xvii. 265 The Syluans that..did dwell, Both in the tufty Frith and in the mossy Fell.
1695 R. Sibbald Autobiogr. (1834) 132 I came over the fells to Jedburgh..the penult day of October 1662.
1769 T. Gray Jrnl. 2 Oct. in Corr. (1971) III. 1078 Greystock-town & castle..lie only 3 miles (over the Fells) from Ulz-water.
1786 R. Burns Poems 225 The Partridge loves the fruitful fells; The Plover loves the mountains.
1795 A. Radcliffe Journey 403 We..were soon amidst the flocks and the crags, whence the look down upon the lake and among the fells was solemn and surprising.
1867 J. Ingelow Gladys 169 With fell and precipice, It ran down steeply to the water's brink.
1875 H. I. Jenkinson Guide Eng. Lake District (ed. 4) 121 After passing through a wall, the open fell is entered.
1880 R. Broughton Second Thoughts II. iii. i. 106 Fells and becks, whose cool memory has often come back..to her.
1901 W. Laidlaw Poetry & Prose 21 [We] where the bent waves on the fells Found camps and cairns.
1963 H. A. Piehler tr. H. Baedeker Scandinavia i. i. 14 In the northernmost region of Norway the fjords, on which the monotonous plateau of fells breaks away with precipitous escarpments, are considerably wider.
1994 C. Cookson Tinker's Girl (1995) i. x. 229 Bruce had been able to take him up into the hills and show him the ropes of getting the sheep down from the high fells.
3. A marsh, a fen. Obsolete. N.E.D. (1895) marks this sense as erroneous.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > marsh, bog, or swamp > [noun]
marsheOE
fenc888
sladec893
moorOE
mossOE
marshlandlOE
lay-fena1225
lay-mirea1225
moor-fenc1275
flosha1300
strother?a1300
marish1327
carrc1330
waterlanda1382
gaseync1400
quaba1425
paludec1425
mersec1440
sumpa1450
palus?1473
wash1483
morass1489
oozea1500
bog?a1513
danka1522
fell1538
soga1552
Camarine1576
gog1583
swale1584
sink1594
haga1600
mere1609
flata1616
swamp1624
pocosin1634
frogland1651
slash1652
poldera1669
savannah1671
pond-land1686
red bog1686
swang1691
slack1719
flowa1740
wetland1743
purgatory1760
curragh1780
squall1784
marais1793
vlei1793
muskeg1806
bog-pit1820
prairie1820
fenhood1834
pakihi1851
terai1852
sponge1856
takyr1864
boglet1869
sinkhole1885
grimpen1902
sphagnum bog1911
blanket bog1939
string bog1959
1538 A. Fitzherbert Newe Bk. Justyces Peas 115 Lowe grounds for medowes, felles, fennes.
1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis i. 6 Throgh fels and trenches thee chase thee coompanye tracked.
1612 J. Speed Theatre of Empire of Great Brit. To Rdr. Her Fels and Fens so replenished with wild foule.
1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion iii. 42 Yee..be grac't With floods, or marshie fels.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive.Some of the more established compounds of this type are treated separately.
ΚΠ
1761 J. Wesley Jrnl. 18 Apr. in Wks. (1827) III. 49 ‘Take the galloway, and guide them to the Fell foot’.
1769 T. Gray Jrnl. 7 Oct. in Corr. (1971) III. 1096 Fell-mutton is now in season.
1774 T. West Antiq. Furness p. xlv The fellanders of Furness.
1849 A. C. Gibson Old Man viii. 89 Pass through the Fell-gate, taking the road to the right, and a pretty stiff pull you will find it.
1863 Spring Lapl. 55 The great dividing fell-range between Norway and Sweden.
1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Fell-head, the top of a mountain not distinguished by a peak.
1874 G. W. Dasent Tales from Fjeld 332 There was no end to the fell-mouse's greediness.
1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 6 Aug. 5/2 The ptarmigan..soaring over the fell-ridge with a low chuckle.
1890 Westmorland Gaz. 8 Nov. 4/3 2,640 Acres of Fell Land.
1908 W. G. Collingwood Scand. Brit. ii. ii. 180 In Cumberland..on fell farms.
2010 Synthese 177 416 Sheep usually graze over open tracts of fell land.
b.
fell sheep n.
ΚΠ
1787 W. Hutchinson Hist. & Antiq. Durham II. 425 The fell sheep are small and degenerated by want of change.
1868 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. Eng. 4 13 The Fell sheep west thereof are Herdwicks, whilst those east and north are of the Scotch, black-faced, or ‘rough’ breed.
1956 W. M. Williams Sociol. Eng. Village i. 15 To-day there is only one lowland farm which has a stock of fell sheep.
2015 Scottish Daily Mail (Nexis) 2 June The fell sheep are halfwild, can smell weakness and would escape and create chaos without good dogs.
fellside n.
ΚΠ
1612 J. Speed Theatre of Empire of Great Brit. i. xliv. (key to street names in unpaginated map of Kendal) The Fell Syde.]
1756 I. Fletcher Diary 10 Jan. (1994) 1 Wrote part of an assignment for John Allason of Cragend of a mortgage deed for ¼ of Wood & Fellside lands between myself & him.
1862 T. Shorter in Weldon's Register Aug. 24 His early fell-side neighbours.
1872 H. I. Jenkinson Guide Eng. Lake District (1879) 322 A point on the fellside is reached where are two paths.
2005 Daily Tel. 18 Feb. 4/6 Mr Todhunter′s modest bungalow nestles against the fellside.
fell-top n.
ΚΠ
1808 Evening Star 11 Aug. The storm fell most heavy upon the hills above Nemoor and Felltop.]
1818 J. N. Brewer Introd. Beauties Eng. & Wales App. 621 One stratum of limestone called the Fell-top limestone.
1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 6 Aug. 5/2 That fell top appeared to be uninhabited by any more [ptarmigan].
1952 T. Armstrong Adam Brunskill iv. 127 The snow-dusted fell-tops looked down.
2008 Arctic, Antarctic, & Alpine Res. 40 422/1 During winters reindeer graze mostly on felltops since the snow depth is lower there than in the forest.
fell-walker n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > fell-walking and rambling > [noun] > participant
fell-walker1899
tramper1960
Wandervogel1962
1899 Cornhill Mag. Apr. 508 A fell walker is constantly jolting himself as he copes with the ground.
1957 R. W. Clark & E. C. Pyatt Mountaineering in Brit. i. 24 Jackson..was a persistent fell-walker and scrambler.
2003 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 4 May v. 11/4 Instead of the spongy, gentle turf enjoyed by the first fell-walkers, we were slogging over rough, sometimes loose and slippery rocks.
fell-walking n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > fell-walking and rambling > [noun]
fell-walking1899
1899 Morning Post 21 Mar. 9/7 (advt.) Fell walking’ records. By William T. Palmer.
1899 Cornhill Mag. Apr. 516 At the Nag's Head, the party divided... This, novel to the traditions of fell walking, must have proved a considerable advantage to the two who carried on the climb.
1956 R. C. Evans On Climbing i. 13 It is as common to start by being taken up a climb as by fell-walking.
2009 P. Gannon Rock Trails Lakeland v. 81 Areas such as Grange Fell or High Rigg often provide good fellwalking and good views when clouds sit on the higher fells.
C2.
fell-berry n. Obsolete any of various berries growing on fells or heaths, esp. a bilberry (genus Vaccinium) or cloudberry ( Rubus chamaemorus).
ΚΠ
1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 16 July 4/2 We make wonderfully good fell-berry puddings.
1897 E. Arnold Wild Norway xviii. 277 The summer haunts of the bear..are chiefly the more open moorlands, where fell-berries literally cover the ground.
1907 A. Chapman Bird-life Borders (ed. 2) xix. 228 Red-wings..make a very short stay, merely resting for a day or two to feed on fell-berries and in marshy meadows.
fell-bloom n. Scottish Obsolete rare bird's-foot trefoil, Lotus corniculatus, or its flower; (also) black medick, Medicago lupulina.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Fell-bloom, yellow clover, an herb... Medicago lupolina, Linn.
1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. Fell-bloom, Dele definition, and substitute;—The flower of Lotus corniculatus, or Bird's-foot trefoil.
1911 A. Warrack Scots Dial. Dict. 169/2 Fell-bloom, the birds' trefoil, yellow clover.
fellfield n. Ecology a dry, exposed alpine region characterized by shallow, rocky soil and sparse vegetation typically composed of lichens, bryophytes, and other low-growing plants; (also) a plant community occupying such a region.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > fertile land or place > land with vegetation > [noun] > specific plants
briery1552
mushroom earth1731
tule1837
native bush1853
thornveld1878
fellfield1909
1909 E. Warming et al. Oecol. Plants lxvii. 256 Most characteristic of the fell-fields [Da. fjældmarker] is the short stature of the plants..; also the fact that the soil is never completely covered by plants.
1978 Country Life 19 Jan. 136/2 High, windswept moss-heaths and fell-fields at 3,000ft (914m) or more.
2008 J. Quinn Arctic & Alpine Biomes ii. 66 Drier fellfields have mountain avens cushions but no mosses, and warmer south-facing fellfield slopes support meadows with a variety of grasses.
fell hound n. a type of foxhound bred for hunting in hilly or mountainous terrain.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > hound > [noun] > fox-hound > varieties of
badger pie1835
Welsh hound1841
fell hound1893
Walker1895
1893 Macmillan's Mag. Jan. 196/1 Nothing of this sort disturbs the people who run with the fell-hounds.
1948 C. E. Lloyd in B. Vesey-Fitzgerald Bk. Dog ii. 452 The Royal Fell Hound Show has done a lot not only to improve the breed but also to promote interest and goodwill.
2010 N. Fine Foxhunting Adventures vii. 52 The Fell hounds made themselves heard quite adequately, and I was able to keep up by ear.
fell pony n. a breed of hardy pony originating in the north of England, now typically black, with a long mane and tail, and feathering on the legs; a pony of this breed.
ΚΠ
1853 Westmorland Gaz. 1 Oct. Dent Horse Fair. At this old established fair,..the show of fell ponies was better both in quantity and quality, than it has been for a year or two back.
1871 ‘A. Clare’ Davie Armstrong 6 A lad..who stood with his hand on the shaggy mane of a rough, sturdy little fell-pony.
1968 Observer's Bk. Horses & Ponies (rev. ed.) 101 Upwards of 60 years ago the Fell pony was used to carry the lead from the mines to the docks on Tyneside, in Northern England.
2014 Daily Mail (Nexis) 2 Apr. She now prefers to ride smaller fell ponies, renowned for their steady temperament.
fell runner n. a participant in the sport or activity of fell running.
ΚΠ
1905 W. T. Palmer Eng. Lakes iv. 46 Here were seen our fell runners, our pole leapers, our trail hounds, our wrestlers in the true mountain style.
1929 Times 4 Feb. 10/2 The crowd..pours into the dale in August to see the fell runners and wrestlers at the Grasmere sports.
2006 Daily Post (Liverpool) (Nexis) 24 Mar. Tomorrow fell-runners will be heading for..the 10-mile Ras yr Aran, which involves 2,500 feet of ascent.
fell running n. the sport or activity of running over fells or hilly terrain, esp. in north-west England.
ΚΠ
1909 Manch. Guardian 10 July 10/7 (heading) Sedbergh's fell-running.
1920 F. Muirhead England 415 Grasmere Sports..are the chief athletic festival in the Lake District, with the best wrestling (Cumberland-Westmorland style), fell-running, and hound-trailing.
2001 Techn. Guide (YHA Adventure Shops) Summer 73/2 Versatile, stable & comfortable daysack designed for fell running, cycling & cross country skiing.
fell-thrush n. English regional (Cumberland). Obsolete rare the mistle thrush, Turdus viscivorus.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > family Muscicapidae (thrushes, etc.) > subfamily Turdinae > [noun] > genus Turdus (thrush) > turdus viscivorus (mistle-thrush)
song thrush1598
mistle-bird1626
mistle thrush1646
shreitch1668
shrite1668
mistletoe thrush1719
storm cock1769
wood-thrush1791
rain-fowl1817
thrice-cock1819
mistle1845
hollin cock1848
fen-thrush1854
storm thrush1854
shirlcock1859
fell-thrush1879
felt1879
jay1880
jay pie1880
Norman thrush1885
stone-thrush1885
1879 W. Dickinson Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (ed. 2) Suppl. 127 Fell thrush.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

felln.5

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/, Scottish English /fɛl/
Forms: 1500s fylle, 1500s– fell.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: fell v.
Etymology: < fell v. Compare earlier fall n.2
1. The action of fell v., in various senses.
a. The action of cutting down timber; (concrete) the timber cut down in one season; = fall n.2 3. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [noun] > felling trees
fallinga1425
felling1447
fell1531
fall1535
woodfall1588
slaughter1657
logging1706
tree-felling1759
fallage1788
slashing1822
fellage1839
wood-cutting1872
throw1879
bush-falling1882
drive1899
bushwhacking1906
clear-cutting1922
coupe1922
landnam1950
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [noun] > felling trees > quantity felled
ploughbote1398
fall1535
hag1535
succisiona1626
fell1767
cut1807
felling1885
cutting1902
1531 in J. Gage Hist. & Antiq. Hengrave, Suffolk (1822) 49 To superintend the gret fell of woode for the manor place.
1555 in T. Wright Churchwardens' Accts. Ludlow (1869) 62 A fylle of tymber.
1648 O. Cromwell Let. 3 Apr. in Lett. & Speeches (1850) I. 280 With copses and ordinary fells.
1664 J. Evelyn Sylva 61 A very gainful commodity it was, when the Fell of a Cypresetum was heretofore reputed a good Daughters Portion.
1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) at Coppice Leave young Trees enough, you may take down the worst at the next Fell.
1767 A. Young Farmer's Lett. 156 A small fell will amount to..thirty pounds.
1855 Farmer's Mag. Jan. 74/1 Care is taken to leave those trees which seem to promise to be most useful when the fell comes round again.
1888 H. R. Haggard Col. Quaritch I. x The trees were gone... ‘Cut down this spring fell’.
b. A litter of lambs; = fall n.2 15. Obsolete (English regional (East Anglian) in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > genus Ovus > [noun] > Ovus Aries (domestic sheep) > lamb > born at one time
fella1637
a1637 B. Jonson Pans Anniv. 262 in Wks. (1640) III So may the first of all our fells be thine.
1823 E. Moor Suffolk Words 125 Fell,..the fall or drop of lambs.
c. Needlework. A hem which has been folded over, turned under, and sewn down so that the seam lies flat and has no raw edges; (occasionally) the action of sewing down a hem in this way. See fell v. 7. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > sewn or ornamented textile fabric > [noun] > sewing or work sewn > seam > specific
seamc1394
round seam1626
fell1852
run and fell1852
French seam1882
dart1884
overseam1891
French seam1903
slot seam1918
jetting1923
channel seam1931
flat-fell seam1939
channel seaming1948
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > sewing or ornamenting textile fabric > [noun] > sewing > sewing together > in specific way
basting1440
seamingc1450
interbastation1666
fine-drawing1688
rentering1699
fell1852
mitre1892
1852 Plain Needle-work 4 Should the edges be raw, one edge must be turned down once, and the other must be turned down double the width, for the purpose of being folded back again in the middle, to form what is called the fell.
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 831/1 Fell,..a form of hem in which one edge is folded over the other and sewed down; or in which one edge is left projecting and is sewed down over the previous seam.
1885 H. K. Brietzcke & E. F. Rooper Plain Needlewk. 29 The fell..means, hemming neatly the turned down edge on to the material itself.
1917 Cornell Rural ​School Leaflet Sept. 230 The material is creased back on a line with the folded edge of the fell.
d. English regional (northern) and Scottish. A blow capable of knocking a person down. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1877 F. Ross et al. Gloss. Words Holderness (at cited word) ‘If thoo disn't 'mind ah sal be givin tha a fell inoo.’
1903 Aberdeen Weekly Free Press 10 Oct. She fell as if he had gien her a fell.
1956 in Sc. National Dict. (1968) at Fell To gie (someone) the caul(d) fell, to strike (someone) dead or as dead.
2. In a piece of weaving on a loom: the last line of weft at any given time.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > treated or processed textiles > [noun] > flax, hemp, or jute > heckled > finest parts > for manufacture of weft thread
fell1807
weft line1896
1807 J. Duncan Pract. & Descriptive Ess. Art of Weaving: Pt. I i. 34 The point, or rather the line, where the last wrought shot of weft is struck up, is called by weavers the fell.
1825 Scots Mechanics' Mag. Dec. 52 The loom is driven to the fell by the spring.
1856 Sci. Amer. 19 July 354/3 The arm..to carry the weft thread from the fell at the edge of the cloth nearly to where the pile warp crosses or makes an angle with the shed.
1908 Manch. Guardian 22 Oct. 12/1 The formation of the shed was brought nearer to the fell of the fabric, and, with half the traverse of the wrap, the same size of shuttle could be used as in the ordinary loom.
1973 Materials & Technol. VI. vi. 408 The beating-up of the last pick of the weft to the previous pick inserted, and referred to as the ‘fell’ of the cloth, is by an automatic movement of the sley carrying the reed.
2014 T. Knisely Weaving Rag Rugs i. 6/2 The beater and reed strike the fell of your rug.

Compounds

fell wood n. Obsolete timber ready to be felled; fellable wood.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > [noun] > building wood > ready for cutting
fell wood1736
1736 D. Neal Hist. Puritans III. 21 The Londoners were distressed..for coals, which obliged them to have recourse to the..cutting down all fell wood on the estates of Delinquents.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

felln.6

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown.
English regional (Derbyshire). Mining. Now historical and rare.
Lead ore in an unrefined state; lead ore fragments and waste which have passed through a sieve.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > minerals > ore > [noun] > metal ore > lead ore > types of
fell1653
steel-ore1661
bing ore (or simply bing)1686
white lead orea1728
green lead ore1728
blanch1747
red lead of Siberia1788
red lead ore1788
hedyphane1832
cerussite1850
silver lead1860
1653 E. Manlove Liberties & Customes Lead-mines Derby 8 Fell, Bous and Knock-barke.
1685 Deposition Robert Dunn (P.R.O.: DL 4/125/1689/2) m. 10 Caused the ffell or Geare gotten within..Milne Close Groves to be carryed downe to the Brooke..& there the same was washed & cleansed.
1811 J. Farey Gen. View Agric. Derbyshire I. 372 The Striker..empties the contents on to the Striking-floor, and..proceeds to sort the Stuff or Bouse into..Knockings, Ridlings or Picking-stones, and Fell, the latter being what passes through an inch iron wire Sieve or Riddle.
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 831/1 Fell,..the finer portions of lead ore which fall through the meshes of the sieve when the ore is sorted by sifting.
1998 J. H. Rieuwerts Gloss. Derbyshire Lead Mining Terms 69/2 Fell, ore mixed with stones, clay and spar, immediately after being drawn from the mine.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

Felln.7

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/
Origin: From a proper name. Etymon: proper name Fell.
Etymology: < the name of John Fell (1625–86), dean of Christ Church and bishop of Oxford.
attributive, esp. in Fell type. Designating the fonts of printing type and matrices procured by John Fell for the Oxford University Press.The use of these fonts was revived in the late 19th cent.: see quot. 1960.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > types, blocks, or plates > relating to type > style of type > [adjective] > others
modern1764
script1782
Caxtonian1811
Porsonian1813
antique type?1817
Aldine1837
Scotch1847
old-face1859
Times1860
old-faced1863
Fell type1883
Fournier1902
monotype1910
Goudy1933
monoline1962
slab serif1970
monospaced1972
1883 Critic (N.Y.) 31 Mar. 146/2 The impression is limited to ninety-five copies, printed with the Fell type on Dutch hand-made paper.
1895 Bookman July 102/1 The Growth of Love. Reprinted in Old English Fell type by H. Daniel. 100 copies. 1890.
1900 H. Hart Cent. Typogr. p. ix All doubts and conjectures as to where most of the Fell types were purchased may..now be regarded as disposed of.
1922 D. B. Updike Printing Types II. 199 Caslon and Fell revivals.
1960 G. A. Glaister Gloss. Bk. 134/2 Fell types, the type-face purchased by Doctor John Fell for the Oxford University Press, c1672. They were cut by Dirck and Bartholomew Voskens of Amsterdam and were a source of inspiration to English type-designers of the time. They are in use today at the Clarendon Press, having been revived in 1876 by C. H. O. Daniel.
1966 H. Williamson Methods Bk. Design (ed. 2) xi. 152 The larger Fell founts..have a bold irregularity which makes most founts now in use look prim.
2013 M. Green in S. Eliot Hist. Oxf. Univ. Press II. v. 267 It is the use of the Fell Small Pica which is of interest when looking at a copy of Robinson Ellis's Catullus.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

felladj.1adv.n.2

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/, Scottish English /fɛl/
Forms: early Middle English feolle, Middle English fele, Middle English–1500s fel, Middle English–1500s felle, Middle English– fell; also Scottish pre-1700 feile, pre-1700 feill.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French fel.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French fel (French regional (northern, Walloon) fel ) disloyal, treacherous, deceitful (10th cent.), fierce, savage, cruel (12th cent.), (of a thing) deadly, terrible (first attested later than in English: late 14th cent.), use as adjective of Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French fel , nominative case of Anglo-Norman feloun , felun , Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French felon felon n.1Compare Old Occitan fel sad, irritated (late 12th or early 13th cent.), and also ( < Old French) Italian fello evil, hostile, aggressive, fierce (late 12th cent.). Specific senses. Several senses ( A. 1a, A. 2a, A. 3b) show specific semantic developments with a positive connotation. Of these, sense A. 1a appears to lack a parallel in French, while the specific sense ‘doughty, valiant’ is not paralleled in French until later (late 14th cent.). Specific forms. With the form felle perhaps compare Middle French (Picardy, Walloon) felle cruel, terrible (late 15th cent.).
In later use chiefly poetic and literary, and English regional (northern) and Scottish.
A. adj.1
1.
a. Shrewd; clever, cunning.In early use often contextually or implicitly with bad connotations (cf. sense A. 1b).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > savagery > [adjective]
grimlyc893
retheeOE
grim971
bitterOE
bremec1175
grillc1175
grimfula1240
cruel1297
sturdy1297
fiercea1300
fellc1300
boistousa1387
felonousc1386
savagea1393
bestiala1398
bremelya1400
felona1400
hetera1400
cursedc1400
wicked14..
vengeablec1430
wolvishc1430
unnatural?1473
inhuman1481
brutisha1513
cruent1524
felonish1530
mannish1530
abominate1531
lionish1549
boarish?1550
truculent?c1550
unhumanc1550
lion-like1556
beastly1558
orped1567
raw?1573
tigerish?1573
unmanlike1579
boisterous1581
savaged1583
tiger-like1587
yond1590
truculental1593
savage wild1595
tigerous1597
inhumane1598
Neronian1598
immane1599
Phalarical1602
ungentle1603
feral1604
savagious1605
fierceful1607
Dionysian1608
wolvy1611
Hunnish1625
lionly1631
tigerly1633
savage-hearted1639
brutal1641
feroce1641
ferocious1646
asperous1650
ferousa1652
wolfish1674
tiger1763
savage-fierce1770
Tartar1809
Tartarly1821
Neroic1851
tigery1859
Neronic1864
unmannish1867
inhumanitarian1947
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > sharpness, shrewdness, insight > [adjective]
sharpc888
yepec1000
spacka1200
yare-witelc1275
fellc1300
yap13..
seeinga1382
far-castinga1387
sightya1400
perceivinga1425
snellc1425
politic?a1439
quickc1449
pregnant?a1475
pert1484
quick-wittedc1525
apt1535
intelligentc1540
queemc1540
ready-witted1576
political1577
of (a) great, deep, etc., reach1579
conceited1583
perspicuous1584
sharp-witteda1586
shrewd1589
inseeing1590
conceived1596
acute1598
pregnate1598
agile1599
nimble-headed1601
insighted1602
nimble1604
nimble-witted1604
penetrant1605
penetrating1606
spraga1616
acuminous1619
discoursing1625
smart1639
penetrativea1641
sagacious1650
nasute1653
acuminate1654
blunt-sharpa1661
long-headed1665
smoky1688
rapid1693
keen1704
gash1706
snack1710
cute1731
mobile1778
wide awake1785
acuminated1786
quick-minded1789
kicky1790
snap1790
downy1803
snacky1806
unbaffleable1827
varmint1829
needle-sharp1836
nimble-brained1836
incisivea1850
spry1849
fast1850
snappy1871
hard-boiled1884
on the spot1903
the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > cunning > [adjective] > astute
oldOE
witterc1100
pratc1175
smeighc1200
fellc1300
yap13..
far-castinga1387
parlousc1390
advisee?a1400
politic?a1439
astucec1550
political1577
astute1611
knowing1664
shrewda1684
sharp1697
leery1718
peery1721
fly1811
canny1816
flash1818
astucious1823
varmint1829
chickaleary1839
wide1879
snide1883
varminty1907
crazy like (or as) a fox1935
c1300 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Otho) (1963) l. 2644 Mid hire felle [c1275 Calig. præt] wrenches.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Prov. xii. 16 Who forsothe dissymulith wrongus, is fel.
c1422 T. Hoccleve Dialogus (Durh.) l. 681 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 134 Wommen been fell and wyse.
c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn l. 1853 Evandir was his name, þat sottill was, & fell.
a1500 Partenay (Trin. Cambr.) l. 1237 Till thay wer growyn ryght large, wyse, and fell.
1561 T. Randolph Let. 7 Dec. in R. Keith Hist. Affairs Church & State Scotl. (1734) I. 205 Liddington hath a crafty Head and fell Tongue.
1725 A. Ramsay Gentle Shepherd iii. ii The fellest fortune-teller e'er was seen.
1795 Scots Mag. Nov. 719/1 Was I like Robie Burns, sae fell At poetry.
1817 W. Caesar Poems 110 I trust ye will be unco silly, Gif ye forget your coxing hizzy [sc. muse]—O man she's fell, then keep her busy.
1885 ‘S. Mucklebackit’ Rural Rhymes 89 Fell auld wives deep read in ‘art’.
1928 W. C. Fraser Yelpin' Stane 46 She admitted there was something in him after all. He was a fell yin.
1932 ‘L. G. Gibbon’ Sunset Song 25 She had a fell tongue, they said, that would clip clouts and yammer a tink from a door.
1988 W. A. D. Riach Galloway Gloss. Fell, clever in a handy way.
b. Treacherous, deceitful, false; villainous. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > [adjective] > deceptive, misleading
swikelc1000
fellc1300
deceivable1303
falselya1350
blind1393
deceivant1393
fallacec1400
sinister1411
deceivousa1425
deceitful1483
fallacious1509
deceiving?a1513
falsesome1533
sophistical1558
misconceited1595
deceptive1611
abusable1660
self-deceptive1810
flambuginous1813
false1842
funny1903
mamaguy1973
braidie-
c1300 St. Nicholas (Laud) l. 340 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 250 Ake þis false cristine man þouȝte op one feolle gynne.
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 4589 (MED) And ys kynnesmen, swykel and fel.
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1882) v. l. 50 He nolde don so fel a dede.
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin (1899) vi. 102 Yef he be fool, or fell, or vileins.
1578 W. Baldwin et al. Last Pt. Mirour for Magistrates (new ed.) sig. F5 O Traitors fel, which in your hartes could fynde Like frendes of hel, the guiltles to betraye.
1622 W. Crashaw tr. Complaint or Dialogue sig. A11 How nought reputed Is the worlds glory, False, deceitfull, fell.
1760 tr. Voltaire Rome Preserv'd iii. i. 40 Extort the truth from those fell traitor's mouths.
1862 J. Grant Capt. of Guard xiii. 92 Like false hounds and fell traitors.
1873 D. Thomas Genius of Gospel x. 149 We find one of the number..throwing off the mask of friendship, and coming forth as His fell betrayer and foe.
2.
a. Full of spirit; keen, eager, intent; sturdy, doughty. Sc. National Dict. (1956) records this sense as still in use in east central and southern Scotland in 1950.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > courage > bravery or boldness > sturdiness > [adjective]
fellc1300
felonousc1386
felon1487
c1300 (?c1225) King Horn (Laud) (1901) l. 1510 (MED) Knyȝtes swyþe felle.
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 5284 (MED) Gweynes schal myn eraunt do, for he ys fers and fel.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) ii. 3071 Þe burgeis wer fulle felle, þei ȝald him hard stoure.
c1475 (?c1451) Bk. Noblesse (Royal) (1860) 64 (MED) Forto make the Romains more egir and fellir in that bataile.
1522 Worlde & Chylde (de Worde) (1909) sig. A.vv So fell a fyghter in a felde was there neuer yfounde.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 4 A faire mon of feturs & fellist in armys.
1593 M. Drayton Idea viii. sig. J2v Fell was he and eger bent, In battell.
c1700 W. Hamilton Dying Words Bonny Heck in J. Watson Choice Coll. Scots Poems (1706) i. 68 When I was Souple, Young and Fell.
1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering I. i. 10 A fell chield at the vermin.
1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby ‘I wasn't i' fell order’, not in able condition.
1917 ‘O. Douglas’ Setons xvi That last nicht he lookit at the fower bairns..and he says, ‘Ye've aye been fell, Tibbie. Be fell noo.’
1928 A. E. Pease Dict. Dial. N. Riding Yorks. 40/2 Fell, eager, striving, keen. ‘T' owd hoss traails mair an' hauf t'draught. He's ower fell be out’—he is too keen for anything. ‘Ma wod! bud he's a fell yan’—a keen and eager one.
2005 M. Rodger Borth'ick Waitter (SCOTS) His marrow, Mrs.Reid..wis ae fell, eident, hard wurkin wuman.
b. With for, on, †to. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > zeal or enthusiasm > [adjective]
needfulOE
anguishous?c1225
eager?a1300
throc1330
fierce1377
desirousc1386
affectuousa1400
yeverousa1400
inwardc1402
earnestful?1406
rathe?c1450
zealing1459
increc1480
affectual1483
zealous1526
affectioneda1533
jealous1535
heartyc1540
affectivec1550
earnest1563
pricking1575
forward1587
affectionate1598
passiveless1602
zealful1602
full-hearteda1616
wholehearted1644
intense1645
high1649
covetous1652
thorough-hearted1656
keen as mustard1659
fell1667
fervent1673
smirk1674
zealed1679
prest1697
strenuous1713
enthusiastic1741
enthusiastical1755
whole-souled1821
con amore1828
lyrical1875
mustard1919
gung ho1942
the mind > will > decision > resolution or determination > [adjective]
stallc1275
unflichinga1340
adviseda1393
affirmed1440
constant1481
resolved1518
resolute1522
well-settled?1532
ratified1533
unbashed1536
bent1548
well-resolved1565
unabashed1571
determinate1587
undaunted1587
peremptory1589
confirmed1594
decretal1608
pight1608
intent1610
definitivea1616
unshrinkinga1616
naylessa1618
pitched1642
decisive1658
martyrly1659
certain1667
fell1667
decretory1674
martyrial1678
decretorian1679
invariable1696
unflinching1728
hell-bent1731
decided1767
determined1773
iron-headed1787
adamantine1788
unwincing1802
stick-at-nothing1805
adamant1816
hard-set1818
rock-like1833
bound1844
do-or-die1851
unbased1860
focused1888
capable de tout1899
purposive1903
go-for-broke1946
hard rock1947
take-no-shit1992
the mind > will > wish or inclination > willingness > [adjective] > eager
yevereOE
frecka1000
cofc1000
fousOE
sharpc1000
anguishous?c1225
eager?a1300
hardya1387
hetera1400
yeverousa1400
belivea1450
forthward1488
yapc1500
ertand1508
tite?a1540
high1649
fell1667
forwardeda1674
agog1683
enthusiastic1777
empressé1878
rearing1904
press-on1948
1667 S. Pepys Diary 15 Jan. (1974) VIII. 14 I am so fell to my business, that I..will not go.
1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby ‘Thoo's mair fell for thy dinner than rife for a race.’
1888 H. R. Haggard Col. Quaritch xxviii I am rarely fell on seeing them and having a holiday look round Lunnon.
3.
a. Intensely painful or destructive; keen, piercing; deadly.
(a) Of a thing, esp. a natural agent, weapon, disease, suffering, poison, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > [adjective]
fellc1330
undone1340
ruinous?a1439
violablea1470
perniciousc1475
destructive1490
confusible1502
destroying1535
exitiable1548
ruinate1562
peremptory1567
wrackful1578
slaughterous1582
ruinating1595
ruining1605
corrumpent1607
wracksome1608
in suds1611
destructory1614
poisonousa1616
wrakefulc1625
predatory1626
predatorious1641
demolishing1648
untwined1649
undoing1654
destructionable1656
destructful1659
mortal1670
wreckinga1677
fatal1692
quadrumanous1704
interdestructive1805
annihilatory1825
demolitionary1834
ruinatious1845
consumptive1860
thunderous1874
the world > space > shape > sharpness of edge or point > [adjective]
sharpc825
bitel?c1200
keena1225
carving?c1225
fellc1330
trenchantc1330
snarpc1480
cuttinga1533
tart?a1534
undullc1540
steel-sharpa1560
teen1578
unrebated1579
unbated1604
biting1607
eager?1611
unblunted1656
shrewd1878
cutty1903
the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > severity > [adjective]
heavyc825
grimc900
strongeOE
hardeOE
drearyOE
eileOE
sweerOE
deara1000
bitterOE
tartc1000
smartOE
unridec1175
sharp?c1225
straitc1275
grievousc1290
fellc1330
shrewda1387
snella1400
unsterna1400
vilea1400
importunea1425
ungainc1425
thrallc1430
peisant1483
sore?a1513
weighty1540
heinous?1541
urgent?1542
asperous?1567
dure1567
spiny1586
searching1590
hoara1600
vengible1601
flinty1613
tugging1642
atrocious1733
uncannya1774
severe1774
stern1830
punishing1833
hefty1867
solid1916
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > cold weather > [adjective] > sharp or bitter
fellc1330
snithinga1350
sharpc1435
hoar?a1500
sneaping1598
shrewd1603
bittera1616
snithe1671
cutting1798
stingy1823
the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > severity > [adjective] > cruel, bitter, or destructive
hateleOE
gramelyc1000
grilla1300
fellc1330
the world > health and disease > ill health > pain > types of pain > [adjective] > relating to agony or torment > causing agony or torment
sharpc1000
grievousc1290
smartc1300
fellc1330
unsufferablea1340
keena1375
poignantc1390
rending?c1400
furiousc1405
stoutc1425
unbearablec1449
agonizing1570
tormenting1575
cruciable1578
raging1590
tormentuous1597
pungent1598
racking1598
acute1615
wrenching1618
excruciating1664
grinding1681
excruciate1773
discruciating1788
unendurable1801
of bare sufferance1823
perialgic1893
the world > life > death > cause of death > [adjective] > of poison
fell1663
phthartic1746
c1330 Otuel (Auch.) (1882) l. 906 Oliuer..bare a spere kene & fel.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 609 (MED) Þis seknesse þat so sore me greues Is feller þan any frek þat euer ȝit hadde.
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) l. 421 [The Ark] flote forthe wyth þe flyt of þe felle wyndez.
c1440 Prose Life Alexander (Thornton) (1913) 110 (MED) He..boghte..a maner of drynke made of puyson that was so felle & so ranke þat þare myghte no vesselle halde it Bot a vessell made of Iren.
a1450 York Plays (1885) 114 (MED) Þe fellest freese þat euer I felyd.
a1500 (?c1450) Bone Florence (1976) 1971 Hys sekeness was so felle.
1559 W. Cuningham Cosmogr. Glasse 66 Like as the Zones..the middest of them all men eschew, the burning is so fell.
1567 G. Turberville Epit., Epigr. (1837) 386 Small arrowis, cruel heads, that fel and forked be.
1572 (a1500) Taill of Rauf Coilȝear (1882) 74 The wedderis ar sa fell, that fallis on the feild.
?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads xvii. 243 The fell dart, fell through his channell bone.
1663 S. Butler Hudibras: First Pt. i. ii. 133 To guard its Leader from fell bane.
1729 T. Cooke Tales 139 With the fellest Venom swells his Veins.
1753 T. Gray Hymn to Adversity in Six Poems 26 Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty.
1757 T. Smollett Reprisal Epil. Such fell seas of trouble.
1787 R. Burns Poems (new ed.) 199 Biting Boreas, fell and doure.
1831 T. Carlyle in Edinb. Rev. Mar. 151 Common ashes are solemnly labelled as fell poison.
1867 G. MacDonald Poems 194 Hunger fell is joined with frost.
1916 New Church Times 17 Apr. in Wipers Times (2006) 52/1 We notice with deep concern that the fell disease poetitis is on the increase.
1954 J. R. R. Tolkien Two Towers iv. v Some heirloom of power and peril it must be. A fell weapon, perchance, devised by the Dark Lord.
1990 J. Reid in J. A. Begg & J. Reid Dipper & Three Wee Deils 43 Gun, snare an trap, an pooshan fell I've learnt tae jouk by sicht an smell.
(b) Of an incident, portion of time, etc.: dreadful, terrible; characterized by death.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > adversity > [adjective] > attended by or causing affliction
eileOE
soreOE
unselec1050
evilc1175
derfa1225
stourc1275
feeble1297
illa1325
fella1400
unhappya1400
unwealful1412
importunea1425
noisomea1450
shrewd1482
importunable?c1485
importunate1490
funestal1538
nippingc1550
troublesome1552
pinching1563
grievesome1568
afflicting1573
afflictive1576
pressing1591
lacerating1609
funest1636
funestous1641
gravaminous1659
unkind1682
plightful1721
damning1798
acanthocladous1858
damnatory1858
fraught1966
the mind > goodness and badness > badness or evil > heinousness > [adjective]
awlyc1200
grievousa1300
grilla1300
uglya1300
strongc1300
outrageousa1325
heinousc1374
excessive1393
curseda1400
fella1400
misshapenc1400
rankc1400
monstruousc1425
enorm1481
prodigiousc1487
villainous1489
nefand1490
sceleratea1513
monstrous1531
funestal1538
enormious1545
facinorous1548
flagitious1550
dire1567
bonable1575
felonious1575
bomination1589
unvenial?1589
heathenish1592
enormous1593
villainous1598
nameless1611
pitchy1612
funest1636
funestous1641
scarleta1643
nefandous1649
aversable1663
atrocious1669
frightful1700
flagrant1706
atrocea1734
diabolical1750
unspeakable1831
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 22428 Þe cruel dais & felle. be-for domis-dai þai salle be sene.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) iv. l. 110 Bot fell tithingis was brocht Persie beforn.
a1500 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Nero) vii. l. 166 For dreid of fellar chawns, Sum soucht succoure in Scotlande.
1557 Earl of Surrey et al. Songes & Sonettes (new ed.) f. 104v Of lofty ruing towers the fals the feller be.
1754 N. Weekes Barbados 23 On that fell Time, her virgin Breast receiv'd The sweet Disease, infected all her Veins.
1799 R. B. Sheridan Pizarro iii. ii. 48 The last and fellest peril of thy life.
1821 J. Baillie Columbus in Metrical Legends xlv. 169 The injur'd Hero's fellest, darkest hour.
1864 House Jrnl. Legislative Assembly State of Kansas 31 In a fell hour they lost, as it were, their all.
1903 Maccabæan July 78/2 He feels that life and faith are strong enough to pass over the fell day to the brighter dawn that surely follows.
1957 William & Mary Q. 14 330 Samuel Ward, Fellow of the college, noted in his diary that Wednesday, January 18, 1605 was the fell day when ‘the surplice was first urged by the ArchBishop to be brought into Emanuel’.
1982 German Q. 55 178 At this fell hour, he pauses to ask himself if he really wants to know what It is, if he would not feel better being deceived.
2009 C. McCullough Too Many Murders (2014) 137 There's no escaping the fell hour of bedtime.
b. Scottish. With reference to taste: keen, pungent. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1786 R. Burns Poems 149 The Dame brings forth..her weel-hain'd kebbuck, fell.
1822 A. Cunningham Trad. Tales II. 275 The wine of a witch's cup is as fell liquor as ever did a kindly turn to a poor man's heart.
1867 A. D. Allardyce Goodwife at Home xxx. Oh! say awa, an' pree the cheese; Ye winna fin't that fell.
4. Of a person or animal, their actions, mind, or attributes: fierce, savage; cruel, ruthless; dreadful, terrible. Also in cruel and fell, fierce and fell.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > [adjective]
litherc893
scathefulc900
balefulOE
orneOE
teenfulOE
evilc1175
venomousc1290
scathela1300
prejudiciala1325
fell?c1335
harmfula1340
grievous1340
ill1340
wicked1340
noisomea1382
venomed1382
noyfulc1384
damageousc1386
mischievousc1390
unwholesomea1400
undisposingc1400
damnablec1420
prejudiciable1429
contagiousc1440
damagefulc1449
pestiferous1458
damageable1474
pestilent?a1475
nuisable1483
nocible1490
nuisible1490
nuisant1494
noxiousa1500
nocent?c1500
pestilential1531
tortious1532
pestilentious1533
nocive1538
offensivea1548
vitiating1547
dangerous1548
offending1552
dispendious1557
injurious1559
offensible1575
offensant1578
baneful1579
incommodious1579
prejudicious1579
prejudical1595
inimicous1598
damnifiable1604
taking1608
obnoxious1612
nocivousc1616
mischieving1621
nocuous1627
nocumentous1644
disserviceable1645
inimical1645
detrimentous1648
injuring1651
detrimental1656
inimicitial1656
nocumental1657
incommodous1677
fatal1681
inimic1696
nociferous1706
damnific1727
inimicable1805
violational1821
insalutary1836
detrimentary1841
wronging1845
unsalvatory1850
damaging1856
damnous1870
wack1986
the world > animals > by nature > [adjective] > wild or vicious
wildc725
wrothOE
keenOE
ramagec1300
fell?c1335
furiousc1374
fierce1377
ramageousa1398
eagerc1405
savage1447
naughtyc1460
criminal1477
ill1480
shrewd1509
mankind1519
roidc1540
mad1565
horn-mad1579
fierceful1607
man-keen1607
indomite1617
fellish1638
ferocious1646
ferousa1652
ferinea1676
kwaai1827
skelm1827
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > fierceness > [adjective]
grimlyc893
wrothc893
reighOE
grima1000
grillc1175
witherc1175
grimfula1240
sturdy1297
wild1297
fiercea1300
man-keenc1300
stoutc1300
cruelc1330
fell?c1335
wicked1375
felonousc1386
felona1400
cursedc1400
runishc1400
keen?c1425
roid?c1425
wolvishc1430
ranishc1450
malicious1485
mankind1519
mannish1530
lionish1549
truculent?c1550
lion-like1556
tigerish?1573
tiger-like1587
truculental1593
Amazonian1595
tigerous1597
feral1604
fierceful1607
efferous1614
lionly1631
tigerly1633
feroce1641
ferocious1646
asperous1650
ferousa1652
blusterous1663
wolfish1674
boarisha1718
savage-fierce1770
Tartar1809
Tartarly1821
wolfy1828
savagerous1832
hawkish1841
tigery1859
attern1868
Hunnish1915
the mind > emotion > compassion > pitilessness > [adjective] > merciless
orelesseOE
sternc1275
fell?c1335
unmerciablea1382
wantona1393
mercilessc1400
unmercifula1425
gracelessc1425
unmercifula1450
unmerciless1545
unsparinga1586
spareless1589
unhuman1611
inclement1621
unmercied1627
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of inspiring fear > quality of terribleness > [adjective]
eislichc888
eyesfulOE
awfulc1175
smarta1200
ferlya1225
sternc1275
grisea1300
uglya1300
dreadfula1325
fell?c1335
stout1338
perilousc1380
terriblec1400
ghastfulc1449
timorous1455
epouventable1477
bedreadc1485
dreadablec1490
dreadc1540
buggisha1555
dreaded1556
monster-like1561
dire1567
scareful1567
terrifying1577
scary1582
direful1583
affrighting1592
dismal1594
affrightful1603
diral1606
tirable1607
frighting1619
scaring1641
affrighteninga1651
formidolous1656
terrific1667
terrifical1677
atrocious1733
terrorful1789
orful1845
lurid1850
terrorsome1890
turble1893
timorsome1894
like the wrath of God1936
?c1335 in W. Heuser Kildare-Gedichte (1904) 136 (MED) Þe fals wolf stode behind, He was doggid and ek felle.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 61 Þe felliste best þet me clepeþ hyane.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 3614 Þo bi-gan þat batayle..feller saw neuer frek from adam to þis time.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iii. l. 2655 (MED) He that was cruel and fell.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 3974 Esau..was fel and wald noght spare.
?c1450 tr. Bk. Knight of La Tour Landry (1906) 14 All proude hertys that be fell.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) i. l. 109 Quhen fechtyng was fellast.
a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (BL Add. 9066) (1879) 115 By a felle lyon thou shalt lose thi lyf.
1553 J. Brende tr. Q. Curtius Rufus Hist. vii. f. 134v He beheld them with a fell countenaunce and rose vp to haue striken at them.
1622 T. Dekker & P. Massinger Virgin Martir i. sig. B3v My fell hate.
1637 J. Milton Comus 10 Fell Charybdis murmur'd soft applause.
1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures xxii. 78 Such fell and cruel people, as the Chineses were.
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 184/2 The..Ban-dog..is fierce, is fell, is stout, is strong.
1718 M. Prior Solomon on Vanity ii, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 436 In the Flow'rs that wreath the sparkling Bowl, Fell Adders hiss, and poys'nous Serpents roll.
1747 S. Richardson Clarissa II. xxxi. 210 I will risque all consequences, said the fell wretch.
1754 T. Scott tr. Table of Cebes 19 Him, who, of some vertuous Drug possest, Grasps the fell Viper coil'd within her Nest.
1812 Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Cantos I & II i. xv. 15 And earth from fellest foemen purge.
1813 W. Scott Rokeby iv. xxvi. 192 His fell design.
1847 R. W. Emerson Poems 140 Even the fell Furies are appeased.
1864 J. H. Burton Scot Abroad I. iii. 118 With all the fell ferocity of men falling on their bitterest feudal enemy.
1877 J. C. Geikie Life & Words Christ I. xxiii. 365 The soul..drawn down to earth by a fell necessity.
1963 R. H. Morrieson Scarecrow xx. 209 Herbert had struck Satter down just in time to prevent his returning, fortified with brandy to finish off his fell work.
1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 98/2 Yon bees (flies) is as fell as owt.
2011 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 23 June 46/1 Patrick O'Brian's fictional..secret agent Dr. Stephen Maturin, who has lethal skill with pistol and sword and a fell passion for the game of espionage.
5. Angry, enraged, impulsive, violent. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > furious anger > [adjective] > furiously angry
grim971
aweddeOE
woodlyc1000
anburstc1275
woodc1275
aburstc1300
eagerc1325
brotheful1330
brothely1330
furiousc1374
wroth as (the) wind1377
throc1380
fella1382
wrothlya1400
grindelc1400
raginga1425
furibund1490
bremit1535
outraging1567
fulminant?1578
wood-like1578
horn-mad1579
snuff1582
woodful1582
maddeda1586
rageful1585
furibundal1593
gary1609
fierce1611
wild1653
infuriate1667
hopping mad1675
maddened1735
sulphureous1751
savage1789
infuriated1796
bouncing mad1834
frenzy1859
furyinga1861
ropeable1870
furied1878
fulminous1886
livid1888
fit to be tied1894
hopping1894
fighting mad1896
tamping mad1946
up the wall1951
ravers1967
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Ecclus. xxiii. 22 A fel soule [L. anima calida] as fyr brennende shal not be quenchid.
?c1450 tr. Bk. Knight of La Tour Landry (1906) 86 Amon was right fel and wrothe.
1558 Bp. T. Watson Holsome Doctr. Seuen Sacramentes xxix. f. clxxxiiv The manne ought not to be bitter and fell agaynste his wyfe in vsing brawlinges.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. i. 20 Oberon is passing fell and wrath. View more context for this quotation
6. Stern, austere; overbearing. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1425 Edward, Duke of York Master of Game (Digby) xiv. 70 He [sc. a goode grehounde] shulde be curteyse and not to fell, wele folowynge his maister.
a1450 (?c1421) J. Lydgate Siege Thebes (Arun.) (1911) l. 483 (MED) Wherto..artow so proude of port..Froward and felle..As thow were lord of vs euerichon?
?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 8079 (MED) Nouthir ouer meke ne ouer fell, Bot in a meen he walde him mell.
7. In weakened sense, with intensifying force usually determined by the context: exceedingly great, huge, mighty, sudden, strange, etc. Now chiefly in at one fell swoop at swoop n. 3b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > [adjective] > vast, immense, or huge
un-i-fohOE
ormeteOE
hugea1275
un-i-feiec1275
infinitec1385
ponderousa1400
hugeful1413
hugyc1420
thrice1470
felon?a1500
hugeousa1529
enormous1544
enormc1560
fell1586
prodigious1601
immensive1604
colossic1607
monumental1632
vast1637
unfathomed1659
colossal1664
ponderose1680
heroic1785
colossian1794
pyramidal1849
astronomical1871
astronomic1923
stratospheric1932
cosmic1935
ginormous1942
galactic1960
mega1968
humongous1970
1586 J. Ferne Blazon of Gentrie 22 This Harrat hath spent a fell time in bussing like a preacher.
?c1600 (c1515) Sc. Field (Lyme) l. 95 in I. F. Baird Poems Stanley Family (D.Phil. thesis, Univ. of Birm.) (1990) 233 There they fell at the first shotte, many a fell fothir.
1645 R. Baillie Let. 15 Aug. (1841) II. 311 Savill's business for a tyme made a fell sturr among us.
1745 J. Brown Let. 6 Aug. in R. Mackenzie John Brown of Haddington (1918) iv. 36 That was a fell way of snapering.
1776 Ld. Ingram in F. J. Child Eng. & Sc. Pop. Ballads (1885) II. lxvi. 132/1 Was na it a fell thing for to see, Twa heads lye on a coad?
1889 J. M. Barrie Window in Thrums xiv. 131 It had a fell lot o' brass aboot it.
1926 Trans. Buchan Field Club 13 118 A fell share o' fat we come a' throw.
1979 D. Campbell in J. Hendry Chapman (1985) 86 Dae ye think the past is fell An' the mair nations the mair hell?
2015 Science 18 Dec. 1447 (caption) In one fell swoop, a team of three naturalists has added 60 new species of dragonfly and damselfly to the 700 previously known in Africa.
B. adv.
1. In a fell manner; cruelly, fiercely, harshly; eagerly, vigorously. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [adverb]
hardlyeOE
strongeOE
hardOE
fastOE
starklyOE
stalworthlyc1175
starkc1225
mainlyc1300
fellc1330
snellc1330
stout1338
wightlya1340
sadlya1375
sharplyc1380
tough1398
stoutly1399
throa1400
wighta1400
lustilyc1400
sorec1400
vigourslyc1400
stiff1422
vigoriouslya1450
vigorouslya1450
actuallya1470
stourlyc1480
forcely?a1500
lustly1529
fricklyc1540
dingilya1555
livelily?1565
crankly1566
forcibly1578
crank1579
wightily?a1600
proudly1600
energetically1609
stiffly1623
ding-dong1628
greenly1633
hard and fast1646
slashingly1659
thwackingly1660
warmlya1684
robustly1709
sonsily1729
forcefullya1774
vim1843
zippily1924
vibrantly1926
punchily1934
zingily1951
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > savagery > [adverb]
grimc893
sternlyc897
bremeOE
bitterlyc1000
etelichec1175
heterlya1225
felonly1303
asperlyc1314
fellc1330
fellyc1330
cruentlyc1380
beastlyc1390
unmanlyc1454
felonmentc1470
cruelly1487
inhumanly1490
unkindfully?1534
boarishlya1563
savagely1563
tiger-like1576
unhumanly1586
inhumanlike1595
inhumanely1598
immanely1612
savagiously1625
wolvishly1628
beastlilya1631
brutisha1645
truculently1654
tigerously1698
brutally1749
tigerishly1878
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > fierceness > [adverb]
grimc893
grimly971
bremeOE
reighlyOE
witherc1200
felonly1303
asperlyc1314
fellc1330
fellyc1330
fiercelya1375
sturdilyc1374
wickedlya1375
sternly1398
runishlyc1400
witherlyc1400
felonmentc1470
cruelly1487
blusterously1548
boarishlya1563
tiger-like1576
sternfully1582
mankindly1606
wolvishly1628
truculently1654
tigerously1698
tigerishly1878
c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 97 He..Was wounded in þat fiȝt Ful felle.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 23997 Quen i sagh þaa juus snell, Rise again mi sun sua fell, Ful wanles wex i þan.
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) l. 1040 Þat fel fretes þe flesch and festred [emended in ed. to festres] bones.
1543 Chron. J. Hardyng f. cxcviiv He chastised theim, no feller as was sene.
1790 J. Fisher Poems Var. Subj. 101 But that he was brought up right fell, His gates made clear.
1827 Sir Roland in W. Motherwell Minstrelsy 127 But tho' she followed him fast and fell, No nearer could she get.
1842 Whistle-Binkie 3rd Ser. 114 Our Sawnies and Maggies, as hard as the horn, At e'en blythe will dance, yet work fell the neist morn.
1915 T. W. Paterson Auld Saws 100 Croon a' yer neibours' kindness By yerkin at it fell.
2. In weakened sense, chiefly as an intensifier: extremely, very.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > very
tooc888
swith971
wellOE
wellOE
fullOE
rightc1175
muchc1225
wellac1275
gainlya1375
endlyc1440
hard?1440
very1448
odda1500
great1535
jolly1549
fellc1600
veryvery1649
gooda1655
vastly1664
strange1667
bloody1676
ever so1686
heartily1727
real1771
precious1775
quarely1805
murry1818
très1819
freely1820
powerfula1822
gurt1824
almighty1830
heap1832
all-fired1833
gradely1850
real1856
bonny1857
heavens1858
veddy1859
canny1867
some1867
oh-so1881
storming1883
spanking1886
socking1896
hefty1898
velly1898
fair dinkum1904
plurry1907
Pygmalion1914
dinkum1915
beaucoup1918
dirty1920
molto1923
snorting1924
honking1929
hellishing1931
thumpingly1948
way1965
mega1966
mondo1968
seriously1970
totally1972
mucho1978
stonking1990
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > extremely or exceedingly
swithlyc888
micklelyeOE
swith971
hardOE
un-i-fohOE
sevenfoldlOE
unmeet?c1225
innerlyc1330
horribly1340
too1340
sore1474
horriblec1475
vehemently1483
outrageous1487
done?a1513
exquisite1529
strangely1532
exceeding1535
exceedingly1535
angardlyc1540
angerlyc1540
choicec1540
vengeable1542
vengeably?1550
extremelya1554
monstrous1569
thrice1579
amain1587
extremea1591
damnably1598
fellc1600
tyrannically1602
exquisitely1603
damnedly1607
preciously1607
damnablea1616
impensively1620
excellingly1621
main1632
fearful1634
vengeancelya1640
upsy1650
impensely1657
twadding1657
vastly1664
hideous1667
mainly1670
consumed1707
consumedly1707
outrageously1749
damned1757
nation1771
shockingly1777
deuced1779
darn1789
darned1807
felly1807
varsal1814
awful1816
awfy1816
frightfully1816
deucedly1819
dogged1819
awfully1820
gallowsa1823
shocking1831
tremendously1832
everlasting1833
terribly1833
fearfully1835
ripping1838
poison1840
thundering1853
frighteninglyc1854
raring1854
hell's own1863
goldarned1866
goddamned1870
doggone1871
acutely1872
whooping1874
stupidly1878
everlastingly1879
hideously1882
densely1883
storming1883
good and1885
thunderingly1885
crazy1887
tremendous1887
madly1888
goldarn1892
howling1895
murderously1916
rasted1919
goddam1921
bitchingly1923
Christly1923
bitching1929
falling-down1930
lousy1932
appallingly1937
stratospherically1941
Christ almighty1945
effing1945
focking1956
dagnab1961
drop-dead1980
hella1987
totes2006
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > extremely or exceedingly > excessively
cruellyc1385
overa1400
fullc1400
parlouslyc1425
mortalc1440
perilousc1440
spitefulc1450
devilish1560
pestilently1567
spitefully1567
cruel1573
parlous1575
deadly1589
intolerable?1593
fellc1600
perditlya1632
excessively1634
devilishly1635
desperate1636
woundya1639
woundlya1644
desperately1653
wicked1663
killing1672
woundily1706
wounded1753
mortally1759
dreadful1762
intolerably1768
perishing1776
tremendously1776
terrifically1777
diabolically1792
woundedly1794
thundering1809
all-firedly1833
preponderously1835
painfully1839
deadlilya1843
severely1854
furiously1856
diabolish1858
fiendish1861
demonish1867
sinfully1869
fiendishly1879
thunderingly1885
only too1889
nightmarishly1891
God almighty1906
Christ almighty1945
c1600 A. Montgomerie Poems (2000) I. 47Fell peart,’ quod Cupid, ‘thou appeirs.’
1629 in P. H. Brown Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1901) 2nd Ser. III. 180 Ye ar fell stout to abide so manie warnings.
1706 in Sc. Antiquary (1898) 12 103 We ken fell well, according to the Proverb of the Chapmen that Trade with us, that all the Winning lyes in the first buying.
a1774 R. Fergusson Poems Var. Subj. (1779) 88 Some fock..craw fell crously o' their wark.
1855 J. C. Morton Cycl. Agric. II. (Gloss.) 722/3 A plough goes too fell when going deeper than is wished.
1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby He eats his meat varry fell.
1889 J. M. Barrie Window in Thrums xvi. 148 She was ‘complaining fell (considerably) about her back the day’.
1932 ‘L. G. Gibbon’ Sunset Song ii. 111 The three scrambled through into the byre then, that was fell dangerous, the rafters were crumbling and falling all about the stalls.
1976 Sc. Rev. Spring 4 I was fell taken with Bobby's corpse.
2015 E. Buchanan in New Writing Scotl. 33 8 The Buroo wis fell busy when he got there.
C. n.2
A fell person or animal. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > fierceness > [noun] > person or being
wolfa900
liona1225
wild manc1290
boar1297
fell1340
tiger?a1513
centaur1565
wolver1593
to speak bandog and Bedlam1600
vulture1605
killbuck1612
man-tigera1652
Tartar1669
hyena1671
dragoon1712
vampire1741
Huna1744
panther1868
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 30 (MED) Wreþe and felounye op-bereþ and nimþ zuo oþerhuyl þe herte of þe felle.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 1124 ‘Caym ware es þi broiþer abell?’ ‘I wat neuer,’ said he, þat fell.
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 1585 Þer þe felle bydeȝ.

Compounds

† As adverb, modifying a participial adjective (frequently hyphenated), esp. with the sense ‘cruelly’, ‘fiercely’, etc. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1587 T. Hughes Certaine Deuises i. ii. 6 Cast of this rage, and fell disposed minde.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) v. i. 144 These fell-lurking Curres. View more context for this quotation
1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby Fell-bred, of a vicious kind.

Derivatives

ˈfell-like adj.
ΚΠ
1854 H. Keddie Phemie Millar II. 179 She did think it was a fell like thing that any one..should be thinking of nonsense.
1870 Fraser's Mag. June 763/1 A ‘fell’ like place for a posie, and a fell like man for posies!
1919 J. Laing Man with Lamp 196 It's a fell-like thing..that strangers can pit neebours to the door this way.
1950 Sc. Educ. Jrnl. 7 Apr. 237/2 A fell-like time at ten ‘oors’ bell.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

felladj.2n.4

Forms: late Middle English felle, late Middle English–1500s fell.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin fell-, fel.
Etymology: < classical Latin fell-, fel gall, bitterness, venom < the same Indo-European base as gall n.1With use as noun compare Anglo-Norman and Old French fel, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French, French fiel (10th cent.), Old Occitan fel, Catalan fel (13th cent.), Spanish hiel (c1200 as fiel), Italian fiele (13th cent. as fele).
Obsolete.
A. adj.2
Bitter. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sourness or acidity > [adjective] > bitter
baskc1175
to do amerec1400
fell?c1425
gallyc1530
rhubarba1586
bitterish1605
acrimonious1617
acrid1633
rodent1633
absinthiana1635
gallish1648
acroamare1657
absinthiala1857
absinthine1862
?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 283 Þe seþinge of some felle [?a1425 N.Y. Acad. Med. austere i. sharp; L. austere] herbe.
B. n.4
Gall, bitterness; (hence) animosity, rancour.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > bitterness > [noun]
rancourc1380
nitrosity?a1425
sour cheerc1440
amaritude1490
fellc1494
rust?1507
stomach grief1553
virulencya1617
ranklea1632
embitteredness1643
embitterment1645
virulence1663
sharpness1673
virulentnessa1676
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > unkindness > bitterness > [noun]
rancourc1380
bitterness1382
sour cheerc1440
amaritude1490
fellc1494
rust?1507
aloea1529
stomach?1553
stomach grief1553
virulencya1617
coloquintida1622
nitrosity1634
embitteredness1643
embitterment1645
virulence1663
sharpness1673
virulentnessa1676
acerbation1793
the mind > emotion > anger > irascibility > ill-naturedness > sourness or bitterness of temper > [noun]
gallc1175
sourness1482
fellc1494
acerbitya1538
tartness1548
acrimony1597
verjuice1598
vinegara1616
acidness1660
asperity1664
thorniness1674
acidity1687
acerbitude1727
acridity1753
vitriol1769
souredness1858
c1494 tr. Deidis of Armorie (Harl.) (1994) 20 The hart, as sais Arestotill in his buk and makis mensioun of bestis, he has na fell; and amang all oþir bestis is ane of þe wisast and þe starkest bestis.
a1500 (a1475) G. Ashby Dicta Philosophorum l. 487 in Poems (1899) 64 (MED) The begynnyng of loue is to say wele; The begynnyng of hate, with evil guise. Thus man-is tonge shewith swetnesse or felle. Of al thinges the tonge berith the belle.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene iii. xi. sig. Nnv Vntroubled of vile feare, or bitter fell.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

fellv.

Brit. /fɛl/, U.S. /fɛl/
Inflections: Past tense and past participle felled /fɛld/;
Forms: 1. Present stem.

α. early Old English fael (imperative, in prefixed forms), early Old English fellan (in prefixed forms), Old English fællan (Anglian), Old English fillan (in prefixed forms), Old English filð (3rd singular indicative, in prefixed forms), Old English fyllan, Old English fylð (3rd singular indicative, in prefixed forms), late Old English (in prefixed forms)–early Middle English ful (imperative), early Middle English feolle (south-west midlands), early Middle English ffulle (south-western), early Middle English fulle (south-western), early Middle English vælle (south-west midlands), early Middle English velle (south-western), Middle English ffelle, Middle English fille, Middle English fylle, Middle English uelle (south-eastern), Middle English uelþ (south-eastern, 3rd singular indicative), Middle English vylle, Middle English–1500s fel, Middle English–1500s felle, Middle English– fell, 1500s well (south-eastern), 1800s fail (Scottish).

β. Chiefly west midlands early Middle English falli (south-western), early Middle English fælle, early Middle English ualle, early Middle English uealle (in prefixed forms), Middle English falle.

2. Past tense.

α. Old English fældę (Mercian, in prefixed forms), Old English fealde (in prefixed forms), Old English fielde (in prefixed forms), Old English filde (in prefixed forms), Old English fylde, Old English fyllde (in prefixed forms), Old English–Middle English felde, early Middle English fælde (south-west midlands), Middle English feild (northern), Middle English feld, Middle English fellede, Middle English fellid, Middle English fellide, Middle English fellyd, Middle English feolde (south-west midlands), Middle English ffulde (south-western), Middle English fulde (south-western), Middle English fyld, Middle English uelde (south-west midlands), Middle English velde (south-western), Middle English– felled, late Middle English felthen (plural, perhaps transmission error); also Scottish pre-1700 feld, pre-1700 fellyt.

β. west midlands early Middle English fealde, early Middle English ualde, Middle English falde.

3. Past participle.

α. early Old English fyld- (inflected form), Old English fælled (in prefixed forms (not ge-)), Old English felled (in prefixed forms (not ge-)), Old English fylled (in prefixed forms (not ge-)), Old English gefælled (Northumbrian), Old English gefeld- (inflected form), Old English gefyld- (inflected form), Old English gefylled, Old English gifælled (Northumbrian), early Middle English uellet (south-west midlands, in prefixed forms (not y-)), Middle English fellede, Middle English fellid, Middle English fellide, Middle English felte, Middle English ffulled (south-western), Middle English fulled (south-western), Middle English ifelled, Middle English ifellyd, Middle English yfeld, Middle English yueld (south-eastern), Middle English–1500s feld, Middle English–1500s felde, Middle English–1500s fellyd, Middle English– felled, late Middle English fel; also Scottish pre-1700 feld, pre-1700 felit, pre-1700 fellit, pre-1700 fellyt; Irish English (northern) 1900s– felt.

β. Chiefly west midlands early Middle English falled (south-western, in prefixed forms (not y-)), early Middle English fallet (in prefixed forms (not y-)), early Middle English ivalled (south-western), early Middle English uælled (in prefixed forms (not y-)), early Middle English ueallet (in prefixed forms (not y-)), Middle English fald, Middle English falt.

Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian fella , falla , Old Dutch -fellen (in tefellen : compare to- prefix2; Middle Dutch, Dutch vellen ), Old Saxon fellian (Middle Low German vellen ), Old High German fellen (Middle High German vellen , German fällen ), Old Icelandic fella , Old Swedish, Swedish fälla , Old Danish fællæ (Danish fælde ), a causative formation < the Germanic base of fall v.Form history and relationship withfall v. The different forms of the stem vowel reflect the divergent Old English development (after i-mutation) of West Germanic a before l plus consonant: in West Saxon æ is broken to ea , which is subsequently i-mutated to ie , and (in late West Saxon) monophthongized to y (this is reflected in south-western Middle English by u ); in Kentish the i-mutation of ea is to e (which is continued in Middle English); in Anglian æ is retracted to a , which is subsequently i-mutated to æ , which is reflected in (some) west midland Middle English texts by a , and elsewhere in the midlands and north by e . See A. Campbell Old Eng. Gram. (1959) §§193(a), 200.1, R. M. Hogg Gram. Old Eng. (1992) I. §5.79, R. Jordan Handb. der mittelenglischen Grammatik (ed. 2, 1934) §62, and compare E. Ekwall Contrib. Hist. Old Eng. Dial. (1917) 60–5. The development to a in west midland Middle English (also attested slightly beyond this region in the Otho manuscript of Laȝamon's Brut, whose scribal language is placed in north-west Wiltshire) resulted in a partial formal merger of this word and fall v., as is evident particularly in early Middle English texts. Middle English transitive uses of the present stem and the past tense with -a- , -ea- , -æ- in west midland texts are covered at this entry (compare quots. c12752 at sense 1a, a1400 at sense 4a), alongside occasional instances of (intransitive) absolute uses or constructions with a prepositional object in matching senses (compare quot. c12751 at sense 1a). It is unclear whether infrequent transitive instances with -a- in west midland texts of the later 15th cent. (compare quot. c1475 at sense 5) show reflexes of the same phonological development or rather reflect the (relatively rarely attested) semantic development of transitive senses of fall v. in later Middle English (compare fall v. 1b, 1c, 29). Similarly, Middle English transitive uses of forms of the past participle with -a- , -ea- , -æ- attested in west midland texts are covered at this entry (compare quot. c1390 at sense 2b), while instances of the falled type attested in (chiefly late) Middle English sources from other regions are treated at fall v. (compare quots. a1325 at fall v. 29a, c1450 at fall v. 29b). Compare β. forms at afell v. and see also discussion at fall v. Prefixed forms in Old English. In Old English the prefixed form gefiellan yfell v. is also attested; compare also afiellan afell v., befiellan (compare be- prefix; early Middle English biueolen ), offiellan to strike down, destroy, kill (compare of- prefix), tofiellan to smite in pieces (compare to- prefix2). It is unclear whether Old English prefixed forms of the past participle (e.g. gefylled ) represent the unprefixed or the prefixed verb, i.e. fell v. or yfell v., as formally they may belong to either. For this reason all Old English prefixed past participle forms have been repeated in the Forms sections of both entries, and examples allocated on the basis of currency in other parts of the paradigm.
I. To cause to fall suddenly or violently.
1.
a. transitive. To cause (a person or animal) to fall to the ground with a blow from the fists, a weapon, etc.; to knock or strike down (a person or animal), esp. so as to render dead or incapacitated. Formerly frequently with down, to the ground, etc. Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (intransitive)] > bring to the ground or lay low
fellOE
to go down1697
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > bring to the ground/lay low > knock down > specifically a person or animal
fellOE
to strike down1470
quell1535
to run down1587
to trip (also turn, tumble, kick, etc.) up a person's heels1587
to strike up the heels of1602
level1770
silence1785
grass1814
send1822
to send to grass1845
beef1926
deck1953
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > bring to the ground/lay low > knock down > with a missile
fell1694
OE Judith 194 Berað linde forð..in sceaðena gemong, fyllan folctogan fagum sweordum, fæge frumgaras.
OE Paris Psalter (1932) cxxxviii. 16 Gif þu syþþan wylt þa firenfullan fyllan mid deaðe.
lOE Laws of Æðelstan (Rochester) vii. 177 Se þe þeof fylle [L. (Quadripartitus) deiciet] beforan oðrum mannum, þæt he wære of ure ealra feo xii pæninga þe betera for þære dæda.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 646 Wið Bruten heo fuhten & fealden of his monnen.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 773 Cuð nu þine strengða & þina stepa main & þisse Peytisce folc fal [c1300 Otho ful] to þe grunde.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 2757 Fehten wih þat Romanisce folc & fellen [c1300 Otho falli] ȝef heo mihten.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 7405 We heom habbeoð iflemed..& mid wepnen i-felled [c1300 Otho ifalled].
c1330 Otuel (Auch.) (1882) l. 949 Anwe of nubie..felde oliuer to grounde.
c1350 Psalter (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) cv. 25 He feld hem doun in wildernesse.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 21402 Constantine..feild fast o [a1400 Fairf. felled doun] þat hethin lede.
c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) l. 3359 Wiþ dynt of spere þou were yfeld.
c1450 (?a1400) Sege Melayne (1880) l. 266 (MED) Þay felde faste of oure cheualrye.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xii. 524 Mony worthy men..wes fellit in that ficht.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Foure Sonnes of Aymon (1885) xii. 288 I felde hym doun ded afore me to therthe.
a1500 Lancelot of Laik (1870) 3299 Sum in the feld fellit is in swon.
1542 H. Brinkelow Lamentacion sig. Aviiv When he stryketh he felleth to the ground.
a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) I. l. 10468 Bot still thai stude durst nother fell nor fle.
1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. xxiii. 490 Most of them were felled and strucken stark dead.
1667 J. Dryden Indian Emperour ii. ii. 21 I fell'd along a Man of Bearded face.
1694 Narbrough's Acct. Several Late Voy. 168 A great White Bear..which he shot at, and fell'd her down.
1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 41 On the top of a withered Stump sate perching a Chamelion..I caused a Black..to fell him with an Earthen Pellet.
1714 A. Pope Chaucer's Wife of Bath in R. Steele Poet. Misc. 26 I..with one Buffet fell'd him on the Floor.
1759 Mod. Part Universal Hist. IV. ii. 116 One of the pages of the Soltân's chamber felled him with a club.
1843 C. J. Lever Jack Hinton xxix Straight between the eyes the weapon struck me, and felled me to the ground.
1852 R. F. Burton Falconry in Valley of Indus v. 60 If two [hawks] are flown they are certain to fell the game.
?1856 F. E. Smedley Harry Coverdale's Courtship li. 379 With one blow of this [fist] I believe I could fell an ox.
1921 Southwestern Reporter 229 425/2 It toppled over upon her, felling her to the floor.
1961 Jet 2 Mar. 61 (headline) Rock 'n' roll idol Jackie Wilson felled by fan's gun.
1990 Rolling Stone 22 Mar. 26/2 Overeager moshers careened out of the slam pit, felling bystanders.
2006 Independent 27 Oct. (Extra section) 5/3 Kane was felled with a single punch.
b. transitive. More generally: to kill (a person or animal). Now rare (Scottish in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > kill [verb (transitive)]
swevec725
quelmeOE
slayc893
quelleOE
of-falleOE
ofslayeOE
aquellc950
ayeteeOE
spillc950
beliveOE
to bring (also do) of (one's) life-dayOE
fordoa1000
forfarea1000
asweveOE
drepeOE
forleseOE
martyrOE
to do (also i-do, draw) of lifeOE
bringc1175
off-quellc1175
quenchc1175
forswelta1225
adeadc1225
to bring of daysc1225
to do to deathc1225
to draw (a person) to deathc1225
murder?c1225
aslayc1275
forferec1275
to lay to ground, to earth (Sc. at eird)c1275
martyrc1300
strangle1303
destroya1325
misdoa1325
killc1330
tailc1330
to take the life of (also fro)c1330
enda1340
to kill to (into, unto) death1362
brittena1375
deadc1374
to ding to deathc1380
mortifya1382
perisha1387
to dight to death1393
colea1400
fella1400
kill out (away, down, up)a1400
to slay up or downa1400
swelta1400
voida1400
deliverc1400
starvec1425
jugylc1440
morta1450
to bring to, on, or upon (one's) bierc1480
to put offc1485
to-slaya1500
to make away with1502
to put (a person or thing) to silencec1503
rida1513
to put downa1525
to hang out of the way1528
dispatch?1529
strikea1535
occidea1538
to firk to death, (out) of lifec1540
to fling to deathc1540
extinct1548
to make out of the way1551
to fet offa1556
to cut offc1565
to make away?1566
occise1575
spoil1578
senda1586
to put away1588
exanimate1593
unmortalize1593
speed1594
unlive1594
execute1597
dislive1598
extinguish1598
to lay along1599
to make hence1605
conclude1606
kill off1607
disanimate1609
feeze1609
to smite, stab in, under the fifth rib1611
to kill dead1615
transporta1616
spatch1616
to take off1619
mactate1623
to make meat of1632
to turn up1642
inanimate1647
pop1649
enecate1657
cadaverate1658
expedite1678
to make dog's meat of1679
to make mincemeat of1709
sluice1749
finisha1753
royna1770
still1778
do1780
deaden1807
deathifyc1810
to lay out1829
cool1833
to use up1833
puckeroo1840
to rub out1840
cadaverize1841
to put under the sod1847
suicide1852
outkill1860
to fix1875
to put under1879
corpse1884
stiffen1888
tip1891
to do away with1899
to take out1900
stretch1902
red-light1906
huff1919
to knock rotten1919
skittle1919
liquidate1924
clip1927
to set over1931
creasea1935
ice1941
lose1942
to put to sleep1942
zap1942
hit1955
to take down1967
wax1968
trash1973
ace1975
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 22903 An hungre leon..þis wolf..feld ant ete him al.
a1500 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Trin. Dublin) 3011 Full fele fleys may nott felle bott a few wasspez.
1681 S. Colvil Mock Poem i. 55 They felled all our Hens and Cocks.
1787 W. Taylor Scots Poems 62 There' some fat Hens sit o' the bawks, Gudewife, ye maun gae, haste ye, fell ane.
1806 J. Cock Simple Strains 104 And for our Meg, she'll fell hersel', I'm sure she'll brak' her heart!
1837 J. D. Carrick Laird of Logan 2nd Ser. 178 An did you ride your poor mare a' the way and back again? you'll fell the trusty beast.
1871 W. Alexander Johnny Gibb (ed. 2) xliii. 244 I hed to fell some bonny yearocks 't aw was keepin'.
1922 J. Inkster Mansie's Röd 50 We're tankfil ta Him 'at rules a', Tamy, 'at shü wisna fell'd.
2005 M. Rodger Borth'ick Waitter (SCOTS) The storie gans at this wolf wis lurkin in o ae slack, oot on the hill, an this wis brocht tae the tent o the Howpasley fermer, whae hied oot tae fell the beast.
2. figurative.
a. transitive. Of disease, hunger, or a similar physical cause: to lay (a person) low, to render prostrate; to incapacitate. Also: †to kill (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > cause to be ill [verb (transitive)] > make weak
fellOE
wastec1230
faintc1386
endull1395
resolvea1398
afaintc1400
defeat?c1400
dissolvec1400
weakc1400
craze1476
feeblish1477
debilite1483
overfeeble1495
plucka1529
to bring low1530
debilitate1541
acraze1549
decaya1554
infirma1555
weaken1569
effeeble1571
enervate1572
enfeeble1576
slay1578
to pull downa1586
prosternate1593
shake1594
to lay along1598
unsinew1598
languefy1607
enerve1613
pulla1616
dispirit1647
imbecilitate1647
unstring1700
to run down1733
sap1755
reduce1767
prostrate1780
shatter1785
undermine1812
imbecile1829
disinvigorate1844
devitalize1849
wreck1850
atrophy1865
crumple1892
OE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Corpus Oxf.) iv. xvii. 302 Se grimmesta hungur þæt folc wæs wæcende, & hi mid arleasre cwale fylde [eOE Tanner heo mid arleasre cwale fylde wæron; L. impia nece prostravit].
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 177 Þenne hit þat tuderinde wið-teoð and cumeð coðe oðer qualm and michel þerof felleð.
a1585 A. Montgomerie Flyting with Polwart (Tullibardine) in Poems (2000) I. 145 The feirsie, þe falling evill that fellis mony freikis.
1665 R. Boyle Occas. Refl. ii. iii. sig. O2v Feavers burn us..Epilepsies fell us, Collicks tear us.
1855 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Yorks. Words 55Felled with his ailment’, prostrate with sickness.
1866 A. Crichton Let. 2 May in W. G. Blaikie Memorials Rev. A. Crichton (1868) 51 The cold of Sabbath night and Monday has felled me again.
1969 Mason City (Iowa) Globe-Gaz. 6 Mar. 1/7 He showed no signs of the nausea that felled him Wednesday.
1975 K. Tynan Diary 17 Feb. (2001) 229 Felled by flu—my hoodlum ambusher, who always chooses low moments to step out of the shadows and zap me.
2015 Church Times 21 Aug. 19/4 [She] was a busy hospital doctor and mother of two young children when she was suddenly felled by illness.
b. transitive. To bring down, ruin, humiliate; to defeat, destroy.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > humility > humiliation > humiliate [verb (transitive)]
anitherOE
fellOE
lowc1175
to lay lowc1225
to set adownc1275
snuba1340
meekc1350
depose1377
aneantizea1382
to bring lowa1387
declinea1400
meekenc1400
to pull downc1425
avalec1430
to-gradea1440
to put downc1440
humble1484
alow1494
deject?1521
depress1526
plucka1529
to cut (rarely to cast down) the comb of?1533
to bring down1535
to bring basec1540
adbass1548
diminish1560
afflict1561
to take down1562
to throw down1567
debase1569
embase1571
diminute1575
to put (also thrust) a person's nose out of jointc1576
exinanite1577
to take (a person) a peg lower1589
to take (a person) down a peg (or two)1589
disbasea1592
to take (a person) down a buttonhole (or two)1592
comb-cut1593
unpuff1598
atterr1605
dismount1608
annihilate1610
crest-fall1611
demit1611
pulla1616
avilea1617
to put a scorn on, upon1633
mortify1639
dimit1658
to put a person's pipe out1720
to let down1747
to set down1753
humiliate1757
to draw (a person's) eyeteeth1789
start1821
squabash1822
to wipe a person's eye1823
to crop the feathers of1827
embarrass1839
to knock (also take, etc.) (a person) off his or her perch1864
to sit upon ——1864
squelch1864
to cut out of all feather1865
to sit on ——1868
to turn down1870
to score off1882
to do (a person) in the eye1891
puncture1908
to put (a person) in (also into) his, her place1908
to cut down to size1927
flatten1932
to slap (a person) down1938
punk1963
the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery or superiority over [verb (transitive)] > overcome or overwhelm > completely or overthrow
shrenchc897
allayOE
fellOE
quellOE
to bring to the groundc1175
forlesec1200
to lay downa1225
acastc1225
accumberc1275
cumber1303
confoundc1330
overthrowc1375
cumrayc1425
overquell?c1450
overwhelvec1450
to nip in (also by, on) the head (also neck, pate)?a1500
prostrate1531
quash1556
couch1577
unhorse1577
prosternate1593
overbeata1616
unchariot1715
floor1828
quench1841
to knock over1853
fling1889
to throw down1890
steamroller1912
wipe1972
zonk1973
OE Paris Psalter (1932) lxxx. 13 Þær min agen folc, Israhela cynn..on wegas mine woldan gangan, þonne ic hiora fynd fylde and hynde [L. ad nihilum inimicos eorum humiliassem].
a1275 St. Margaret (Trin. Cambr.) l. 215 in A. S. M. Clark Seint Maregrete & Body & Soul (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Michigan) (1972) 75 I bidde ihesu crist þi miste þat he felle.
c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 3330 (MED) Sone was feld his pride.
c1390 MS Vernon Homilies in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen (1877) 57 263 (MED) Þou hast cast sathanas And fald hym as traitour in plas.
a1400 (c1300) Northern Homily: Serm. on Gospels (Coll. Phys.) in Middle Eng. Dict. at Fellen God praier..goddes wreth swages and felles.
a1425 Shrewsbury Fragm. in N. Davis Non-Cycle Plays & Fragm. (1970) 6 Amend oure mournyng..And fonde oure freylnes for to fell!
a1500 (c1340) R. Rolle Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) cxxii. §1. 440 Ill luf fellis vs doun in til the erth.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Isa. x. E He shal..fel the hie mynded.
1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iv. i. sig. G2v Starke feld with brusing stroke of chance.
a1699 J. Fraser Memoirs (1738) vi. 143 Sin in general mortified, and a particular Sin, viz. playing at Cards, quite felled, with which I had so long wrestled in vain.
1816 Mr. North Speech in Court House Galway 2 Apr. 10 Beneath the stroke of this inexorable law his flourishing fortunes were felled in an instant.
1825 Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 23 Apr. 199 The last blow very nearly felled these classes; and one more brings them completely down.
1917 Escanaba (Mich.) Morning Press 29 June 3/1 The Yankees were felled by the Red Hose in both events today.
1977 Times 19 Mar. 6/6 (heading) Champions felled in both semi-finals.
1990 Washington Post (Metro section) c1/1 (headline) An academic star felled by a scandalous allegation.
2005 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 13 Mar. iv. 12/1 Some had called it a Rose Revolution—like the one that felled President Eduard Shevardnadze of Georgia in 2003.
c. transitive. Esp. of an event or piece of news: to affect (a person) profoundly; to upset (a person) deeply; to ‘knock sideways’.
ΚΠ
1827 H. Cockburn Let. 15 Aug. in Some Lett. (1932) 22 Creeffy, who I understand has been sadly felled by his father's death.
1855 E. C. Gaskell North & South II. xi. 141 I'm welly felled wi' seeing him.
1930 H. T. Comstock Fate is Fool vi. 108 ‘We'll talk this over at dinner to-night, Aunt Con. I know you are knocked galley west’... ‘My dear, my dear,’ she said, and there were tears in her eyes, genuine ones, ‘you—you have quite felled me.’
2013 Courier Mail (Queensland, Austral.) (Nexis) 28 Sept. 85 Australia's publishing world was mourning his loss. His publisher at HarperCollins..said everyone was felled by the news.
3. transitive. To cut down (a tree). Also occasionally with down. Also intransitive.Now the most common sense.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [verb (transitive)] > fell timber
fellOE
hewc1000
hewc1175
cutc1300
falla1325
stockc1440
to take down1818
droop1819
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > cutting > cut [verb (transitive)] > cut down
fellOE
mowOE
sweepa1300
undercuta1382
swinge1573
OE tr. Alexander's Let. to Aristotle (1995) §16. 234 Sioðþan hie þa gewicod hæfdon, þa het ic ceorfan ða bearwas & þone wudu fyllan [L. caedi nemus] þæt monnum wære þy eþre to þæm wæterscipe to ganganne.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 8086 Heo uelden [c1300 Otho fulde] þæne wude adun.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 12395 He him suld sli timber fell.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure l. 1247 He fellez forestez fele.
1511 Accts. St. John's Hosp., Canterbury (Canterbury Cathedral Archives: CCA-U13/4) Payd..for wellyng treys iii d.
1520 Chron. Eng. ii. f. 11v/2 Brute caused to fell downe woddes.
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry ii. f. 104v The Chestnut may be feld euery seuenth yeere.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 (1623) ii. i. 55 Hewes downe and fells the hardest-tymber'd Oake. View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vi. 575 Oak or Firr With branches lopt, in Wood or Mountain fell'd . View more context for this quotation
1725 D. Defoe New Voy. round World ii. 186 They found Three Trees..and they..fell'd them, and shap'd them.
1794 J. Tuke Gen. View Agric. N. Riding Yorks. 88 Spring-felling, that is, felling the trees as near as possible to the ground, but so as not to injure the crown of the root.
1826 A. Lister Diary 10 Jan. in H. Whitbread No Priest but Love (1992) 154 The Keighleys felling a large willow by the brookside.
1847 F. Marryat Children of New Forest I. xiii. 262 They..went out to fell at a cluster of small spruce fir about a mile off.
1869 W. E. H. Lecky Hist. European Morals II. i. 195 Gigantic forests were felled.
1942 L. D. Rich We took to Woods iii. 95 A stump cutter..works alone, felling his own trees.
1990 L. de Bernières War Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts xxxii. 275 Don Emmanuel felled the balsa tree in a couple of minutes.
2013 Perthshire Advertiser 11 Oct. 46/3 Forestry Commission Scotland workers started felling trees such as grand fir, Douglas fir and western hemlock.
4.
a. transitive. To cause (a building, wall, or other object) to fall to the ground; to knock down; to demolish. Also with down.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > break down, demolish, or ruin
spillc950
fellOE
to cast downc1230
destroy1297
to turn up?c1335
to throw down1340
to ding downc1380
to break downa1382
subverta1382
underturn1382
to take downc1384
falla1400
to make (a building, etc.) plain (with the earth)a1400
voida1400
brittenc1400
to burst downc1440
to pull downc1450
pluck1481
tumble1487
wreck1510
defacea1513
confound1523
raze1523
arase1530
to beat downc1540
ruinate1548
demolish1560
plane1562
to shovel down1563
race?1567
ruin1585
rape1597
unwall1598
to bluster down16..
raise1603
level1614
debolish1615
unbuilda1616
to make smooth work of1616
slight1640
to knock down1776
squabash1822
collapse1883
to turn over1897
mash1924
rubble1945
to take apart1978
OE Cynewulf Crist II 486 Hweorfað to hæþnum, hergas breotaþ, fyllað ond feogað, feondscype dwæscað, sibbe sawað on sefan manna þurh meahta sped.
OE Dream of Rood 73 We [sc. the crosses] ðær..gode hwile stodon on staðole... Þa us man fyllan ongan ealle to eorðan.
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) l. 767 Mid liste me mai walle felle.
c1300 St. James Less (Laud) 43 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 366 Þe prince for wrathþe of his [sc. St James'] prechingue þe laddre a-doun gan felle.
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) l. 8586 A wind..So gret it com þat it fulde moni hous adoun.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) 7261 Þe hous he falde [Vesp. feld].
a1450 Generides (Pierpont Morgan) (1865) l. 4002 Amalek he smote on the crovn That twoo quarters he feld a-doun Of his helme.
c1450 (a1375) Octavian (Calig.) (1979) l. 1525 Syx baners wer yfeld.
1467 in Manners & Househ. Expenses Eng. (1841) 172 The wales of the salte howses..schal be felled or it be long.
1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 269 The webbe..if one throw or cast dust vpon it..will rather be distended and stretched, then either vndone, broken, or felled downe.
1854 N.-Y. Daily Times 17 June 2/6 By the river where Horatius felled the bridge.
1873 Christian Messenger 9 340 Faith felled the walls and conquered the city.
1918 Musical Q. 4 493 What did the trumpets blow which felled the walls of Jericho?
1924 Pop. Sci. Monthly Apr. 55/3 Twenty slender sticks of dynamite felled this blast furnace.
2006 R. Chandrasekaran Imperial Life in Emerald City (2007) ii. 36 American marines felled Saddam's statue in Baghdad.
b. transitive. To knock (fruit, leaves, or flowers) off a tree. Also with down. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > cause (seed or leaves) to fall
fellc1400
shatter1577
c1400 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. xix. l. 128 That elde felde [a1400 Laud 656 fulde, a1425 Fairf. feld] efte þat frut.
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 911 Nyghtyngales..The leeues felden as they flyen.
a1438 Bk. Margery Kempe (1940) i. 126 Cam a bere..schakyng þe pertre & fellyng down þe flowerys.
1894 Monticello (Iowa) Express 5 July The late young tornado felled quite a good many apples to the ground.
5. transitive. To cause (a person) to stumble morally; to cause to falter. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > of difficulty: beset (a person) [verb (transitive)] > put (a person) in difficulty > trip up
fellOE
trip1557
OE (Mercian) Rushw. Gospels: Matt. v. 29 Quod si oculus tus [read tuus] dexter scandalizat te, erue eum et proiece abs te : gif þanne þin ege þæt swiþre æswicað þe uel fælle þec ahloca hit & awerp from ðe.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. iii. l. 126 Ȝowre fadre she felled þorw fals biheste.
c1475 (a1400) Sir Amadace (Taylor) in J. Robson Three Early Eng. Metrical Romances (1842) 42 (MED) God may bothe mon falle and rise.
II. To bring down, without the notion of suddenness or violence.
6. transitive. To cause to cease or abate; to reduce; to lower. Obsolete (Scottish in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > lower or let down
abeyOE
fellOE
to let down1154
lowc1330
vailc1330
revalec1475
to let fallc1500
bate1530
stoop1530
down1595
fall1595
embase1605
dismount1609
lower1626
sink1632
prostratea1718
OE Andreas (1932) 1688 Swylce se halga herigeas þreade, deofulgild todraf ond gedwolan fylde.
a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) l. 890 Y shal ȝow telle what shal best þys tempest felle.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 3376 Þe mikel luue o rebecca þan feld þe soru o dame sarra.
c1450 How Good Wijf (Lamb. 853) in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 39 Ne wende þou not..to þe tauerne þi worschip to felle.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. xx. 234 To fell all fowll defame.
1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Love in W. W. Skeat Chaucerian & Other Pieces (1897) 18 My blisse and my mirthe arn feld.
c1620 A. Hume Of Orthogr. Britan Tongue (1870) i. ix. §7 The circumflex accent both liftes and felles the syllab that it possesseth.
1887 D. Donaldson Jamieson's Sc. Dict. Suppl. To fell, to let fall, lower; hence, to abate, deduct, as in price or payment.
c1900 R. Heughan in Sc. National Dict. (1956) IV. (at cited word) [Kirkcudbrightshire] When the sowp is nicely risen all over with soapy bubbles, it is said to be freeth, and when anything dirty is put into it, the sowp is said to be felled.
7. transitive. Needlework. To fold over, turn under, and sew down (one of the edges of a seam) so that the seam lies flat and has no raw edges; to finish (a seam) in this way. Also: to cover a seam or raw edge by folding over and sewing down (binding or other material). Frequently with down; also over, to (a surface). Also intransitive. Cf. run and fell adj. and n. at run v. Phrases 5a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > sewing or ornamenting textile fabric > sew or ornament textile fabric [verb (transitive)] > sew > other
to take up1620
fell1758
cross-stitch1794
strand1894
prick-stitch1895
stab-stitch1917
lockstitch1919
1758 B. Franklin Let. 19 Feb. in Papers (1963) VII. 382 It is to be sow'd together, the Edges being first fell'd down.
1838 Workwoman's Guide: Instr. Apparel vi. 148 In making up, run and fell the seams very neatly, making the two gores fall together between the front and back breadths.
1842 R. H. Barham Aunt Fanny in Ingoldsby Legends 2nd Ser. 141 Each..began working..‘Felling the Seams’, and ‘whipping the Frill’.
1862 M. T. Morrall Hist. Needle-making 41 I'm teaching little Mary to gather and to fell.
1887 Spons' Househ. Man. 891 Fell down the turnings, or only overcast them.
1892 Weldon's Ladies' Jrnl. Oct. 73 This opening is turned in once on the wrong side, over which is felled a piece of binding.
1904 A. K. Smith Cutting out for Student Teachers xxiii. 176 A piece of tape should be felled over the raw edge on the wrong side.
1977 Titusville (Pa.) Herald 8 Jan. 4/1 The seamstress fells a seam.
1993 C. B. Shaeffer Couture Sewing Techniques (1998) iv. 77 Baste and then permanently fell or slipstitch the folded edge to the stitched line.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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n.1eOEn.3a1400n.51531n.61653n.71883adj.1adv.n.2c1300adj.2n.4?c1425v.OE
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