Fell

Verb

 * 1)  To make something fall; especially to chop down a tree.

Verb
fell



Noun

 * 1) That portion of a kilt, from the waist to the seat, where the pleats are stitched down
 * 2) An animal skin, hide

Verb

 * 1)  To stitch down a protruding flap of fabric, as a seam allowance, or pleat.
 * 2) * 2006, Colette Wolff, The Art of Manipulating Fabric, p. 296
 * To fell seam allowances, catch the lining underneath before emerging 1/4" (6mm) ahead, and 1/8" (3mm) to 1/4" (6mm) into the seam allowance.

Noun

 * 1)  A rocky ridge or chain of mountains.
 * 2)  A wild field or upland moor

Adjective

 * 1)  fierce, savage (e.g., one fell swoop)
 * 2)  Pungent.
 * 3) Having an extremely cruel or irrational trait
 * 1) Having an extremely cruel or irrational trait

Thesaurus
Draconian, Leatherette, Leatheroid, Tartarean, align, alkali flat, alluvial plain, animal, anthill, anthropophagous, appalling, astounding, atrocious, awe-inspiring, awesome, awful, baleful, barbaric, barbarous, barrow, basin, beastly, beat down, bend, bestial, bloodthirsty, bloody, bloody-minded, blow down, blow over, blow to pieces, blow up, bottomland, bowl down, bowl over, brae, brain, break, break down, bring down, brutal, brutalized, brute, brutish, bulldog, bulldoze, burn down, burn to death, bushveld, butte, campo, cannibalistic, cast down, champaign, champaign country, charge, chop down, coastal plain, coat, cock, conquer, cruel, cruel-hearted, crush, cut down, cut to pieces, cuticle, dangerous, dash down, deal a deathblow, deck, delta, demolish, demoniac, demoniacal, dermis, desert, detonate, devilish, diabolic, dire, direful, discharge, disintegrate, down, downs, dread, dreaded, dreadful, drop, drumlin, dune, eject, equalize, even, fearful, feral, ferocious, fetch down, fiendish, fiendlike, fierce, fire, fire off, flat, flat country, flatland, flats, flatten, fleece, flesh, floor, flush, foothills, formidable, frag, fur, furring, ghastly, ghoulish, give the quietus, grade, grass veld, grassland, grievous, grim, grisly, ground, gruesome, gun, gun down, gun for, heath, hellish, hew down, hide, hideous, hill, hillock, hit, horrendous, horrible, horrid, horrific, horrifying, humble, hummock, imitation fur, imitation leather, implacable, incinerate, infernal, inhuman, inhumane, integument, jacket, jugulate, kill, knob, knock down, knock over, knoll, lande, lapidate, lay, lay down, lay flat, lay level, lay low, lay out, leather, leather paper, let fly, let off, level, llano, load, lowland, lowlands, lunar mare, macabre, major, malefic, maleficent, malign, mare, master, mesa, mesilla, molehill, monticle, monticule, moor, moorland, morbid, mound, mow down, murderous, open country, outer layer, outer skin, override, pampa, pampas, pelt, peltry, peneplain, pepper, pick off, pistol, plain, plains, plateau, playa, plug, poleax, pot, potshoot, potshot, prairie, precipitate, prime, prostrate, pull down, put down, quell, rase, rawhide, raze, redoubtable, reduce, relentless, riddle, ride down, rind, roll, roll flat, ruthless, sadistic, salt flat, salt marsh, salt pan, sand dune, sanguinary, sanguineous, satanic, savage, savanna, schrecklich, sebkha, send headlong, serious, sharkish, sheath, shocking, shoot, shoot at, shoot down, shoot to death, shotgun, silence, sinister, skin, skins, slash, slavering, smash, smooth, smooth out, smoothen, snipe, spread-eagle, stab to death, steamroll, steamroller, steppe, stone, stone to death, strike, strike dead, subdue, subhuman, subjugate, supinate, suppress, swell, table, tableland, take a potshot, take down, tear down, tegument, terrible, terrific, throw, throw down, topple, torpedo, trample down, trample underfoot, tread underfoot, tree veld, tremendous, trip, truculent, tumble, tundra, ugly, unchristian, uncivilized, unhuman, unrelenting, upland, vair, vanquish, vaporize, vega, veld, vicious, weald, whack down, wide-open spaces, wold, wolfish

Etymology 1
fellan:

Etymology 2
fell: from fell:, from  (compare West Frisian fel:, Dutch, vel:, German Fell:), from  'skin, animal hide' (compare Latin pellis: 'skin', Lithuanian plene: 'skin', Russian plená 'pelt',  plah: 'to cover', Ancient Greek péllas 'skin').



Etymology 3
From fell:, fjall:, from  (compare  Felsen: 'boulder, cliff',  vels 'hill, mountain'), from  (compare  aile 'boulder, cliff', Latin Palatium, Ancient Greek palléa, pélla 'stone', Pashto parša 'id.', Sanskrit pāşāņá 'id.')

Etymology 4
fel:, from fel:, felo:, fæle: "cruel, savage, fierce" (especially in compounds, ealfelu), from. Akin to fal: "cruel",  fel: "cruel, wicked, wroth",  fæl: "hideous, ghastly, grim",  valant:. More at felon.

Verb

 * Czech: ,
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: dehaki
 * Finnish: kaataa, hakata (poikki) (a tree)


 * French:
 * German:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:

Noun

 * Finnish:


 * Finnish: ,


 * Swedish:

Noun

 * Finnish:, , ,
 * Norwegian:


 * Swedish:

Etymology
Old Norse

Noun
fell


 * 1) hill

Etymology
, whence also Old High German vel

Noun

 * 1) fell
 * 2) skin