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Origin and history of pell

pell(n.)

"a roll of parchment," mid-15c., earlier in now-obsolete sense of "skin, hide" (mid-14c.), from Anglo-French pell, Old French pel "skin" (13c., Modern French peau), from Latin pellem, pellis "skin, leather, parchment, hide" (from PIE root *pel- (3) "skin, hide").

Entries linking to pell

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "skin, hide."

It might form all or part of: erysipelas; fell (n.2) "skin or hide of an animal;" film; pell; pellagra; pellicle; pelt (n.) "skin of a fur-bearing animal;" pillion; surplice.

It might also be the source of: Greek pella, Latin pellis "skin;" Old English filmen "membrane, thin skin, foreskin."

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