CURTAIL


Meaning of CURTAIL in English

I. |kər|tāl, |kə̄|-, |kəi|-, _kə(r)ˈt-, esp before pause or consonant -āəl transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: by folk etymology from earlier curtal to make a curtal of, from curtal, n.

1.

a. : to cut off the end or any part of : shorten in linear extent : reduce in area or amount

whether the hair is curtailed or long and upswept — New Yorker

its area — it had extended … southward to the Ohio and westward to the Mississippi — was greatly curtailed — B.K.Sandwell

b. : to diminish (intangible objects or values) : shorten in duration or scope : abridge , reduce

curtail the power of feudal militarists — Vera M. Dean

curtail the working day

2. : to deprive, dock, or rob (a person) of a right, privilege, or possession as indicated — used with of

curtailed of his heritage

curtailed of one's citizenship

Synonyms: see shorten

II. ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ noun

( -s )

Etymology: probably by folk etymology from curtal, n.

: the scroll end of any architectural member (as a step at the foot of a flight)

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.