No exact match translations found for 'Culm' in malayalam.
Word 'Culm' in Other Languages
- Culm in Assamese অসমীয়া
- Culm in Bengali বাংলা
- Culm in Bodo बड़ो
- Culm in Dogri डोगरी
- Culm in English
- Culm in Gujarati ગુજરાતી
- Culm in Hindi हिन्दी
- Culm in Kannada ಕನ್ನಡ
- Culm in Kashmiri कॉशुर
- Culm in Konkani कोंकणी
- Culm in Maithili মৈথিলী
- Culm in Malayalam മലയാളം
- Culm in Manipuri মৈতৈলোন্
- Culm in Marathi मराठी
- Culm in Nepali नेपाली
- Culm in Oriya ଓଡ଼ିଆ
- Culm in Punjabi ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
- Culm in Sanskrit संस्कृतम्
- Culm in Santali
- Culm in Sindhi سنڌي
- Culm in Tamil தமிழ்
- Culm in Telugu తెలుగు
- Culm in Urdu اُردُو
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Culm
Part of Speech
Noun
Pronunciation
/kʌlm/ (UK, US)
Definitions
- The hollow stem of grasses, especially in plants like bamboo or wheat.
- Waste from coal mining, particularly fine coal or anthracite dust.
Usage Examples
- The farmer examined the culm of the wheat plants to check their health.
- The coal mining industry struggled with managing culm heaps near the town.
Etymology
Derived from Latin ‘culmus,’ meaning ‘stalk’ or ‘stem,’ used in botanical contexts; also linked to Middle English usage in mining terminology.
Synonyms
- Stem, Stalk, Shoot (Botanical)
- Coal Dust, Slack, Residue (Mining)
Antonyms
- Leaf, Root, Branch (Botanical)
- Solid Coal, Ore (Mining)
Translations
Language | Translation | Pronunciation |
---|---|---|
Spanish | Tallo / Residuos de carbón | ta-yo / re-see-duos de car-bon |
French | Chaume / Débris de charbon | shom / de-bri de shar-bon |
German | Halm / Kohlenstaub | halm / koh-len-shtawb |
Hindi | तना / कोयला कचरा | tana / koyla kachra |
Tamil | தண்டு / நிலக்கரி பொடிக்கூறு | thandu / nilakkari podikkuuru |
Chinese | 稈 / 煤屑 | gǎn / méi xiè |
Russian | Стебель / Угольная пыль | stebel / ugolnaya pyl' |
Arabic | ساق النبات / غبار الفحم | saq al-nabat / gubar al-fahm |
Japanese | 茎 / 石炭の粉 | kuki / sekitan no kona |
Korean | 줄기 / 석탄 먼지 | julgi / seoktan meonji |
Regional Pronunciation Variations
- UK: /kʌlm/ (short, clear ‘u’ sound)
- US: /kʌlm/ (same, though some regions pronounce with a softer ‘l’)
Historical Usage
The term ‘culm’ has been used since medieval times in both botanical and mining contexts, with early references in agricultural texts and coal mining records.
Cultural Nuances
In agriculture, culm refers to the central part of cereal plants, crucial for their growth. In industrial history, ‘culm’ is associated with waste coal piles that affected landscapes and communities.
More Information
‘Culm’ has dual meanings, widely used in both botany and mining. In the botanical sense, it describes the main stalk of grasses, playing an important role in plant physiology. In mining, culm has historical significance in regions that depended on coal extraction, where piles of culm were both an environmental concern and an economic resource. While the term remains relevant in specialized fields, it has largely disappeared from everyday vocabulary.