PALL


Meaning of PALL in English

I. ˈpȯl noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English pæll, from Latin pallium pall, Greek mantle; akin to Latin palla women's mantle

1. archaic : rich fine cloth used for the outer garments of persons of rank

2.

a. archaic : an outer garment (as a cloak or mantle) especially when of rich material

b. : pallium 1b

3.

a.

(1) archaic : altar cloth

(2) : frontal 2

(3) : a linen cloth for covering the chalice ; especially : a square piece of cardboard covered with cloth that is usually embroidered on the upper side

b.

(1) : a fine cloth spread over or on something (as a canopy or counterpane) ; especially : a heavy cloth draped over a coffin, hearse, or tomb

(2) : coffin ; especially : one holding a body

c. or pall·ing -liŋ : a canvas hatch cover on a ship

4. : a thing that covers or conceals: as

a. obsolete : cloak 2c

b. : an overspreading element that produces an effect of gloom

a pall of smoke

5.

a. : a conventionalized heraldic representation of the front half of an archiepiscopal pallium

b. : pairle

- per pall

II. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

: to cover with or as if with a pall : cloak , drape

III. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English pallen, short for apallen to appall

intransitive verb

1. : to lose strength : fail in vigor or effectiveness

2.

a. obsolete , of wine or beer : to become flat

b. : to lose in interest or attraction

these occupations palled — Virginia Woolf

in the long run ugliness palls almost as much as beauty — George Saintsbury

— often used with on or upon

smooth, rhetorical mind must have palled on one who liked sharp edges — John Buchan

3. : to become tired of something at first pleasurable

pall of too much music

transitive verb

1. obsolete : to make faint or fainthearted : daunt , appall

2.

a. obsolete : to cause (wine or beer) to become flat

b. : to cause (something pleasurable) to become insipid

reason and reflection … pall all his enjoyments — Francis Atterbury

3. : to deprive (as a person or his senses) of pleasure in something usually by cloying or satiating

the choicest delicacies pall the stomach in time

Synonyms: see satiate

IV. noun

( -s )

Etymology: pall (III)

obsolete : nausea , qualm

V.

variant of pawl

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