Hull
Origin 1
Middle English hul ("seed covering"), from Old English hulu ("seed covering"), from Proto-Germanic *hulus (compare German Hülle, Hülse ("cover, veil")), perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *kal- ("hard") (compare Old Irish calad, calath ("hard"), Latin callus, callum ("rough skin"), Old Church Slavonic калити (kaliti, "to cool, harden")). For the sense development, compare French coque ("nutshell; ship's hull"), Ancient Greek φάσηλος (phasēlos, "bean pod; yacht").
Verb
- To remove the outer covering of a fruit or seed.She sat on the back porch hulling peanuts.
Origin 2
Origin uncertain; perhaps the same word as Etymology 1, above.
Noun
hull
(plural hulls)Verb
- (obsolete, intransitive, nautical) to drift; to be carried by the impetus of wind or water on the ship's hull alone, with sails furled
- 1603, John Florio, translating Michel de Montaigne, Essays, II.1:We goe not, but we are carried: as things that flote, now gliding gently, now hulling violently, according as the water is, either stormy or calme.
- (transitive) to hit (a ship) in the hull with cannon fire etc----