Talk:dull

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Etymologies

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Century also has dull as a noun and a verb of unknown origin — it says "there is no evidence to connect it with" Latin dolus (artifice; a snare) — used in the Southern US, and by now probably obsolete. The noun denotes a noose of string, metal wire, or hair used to snare fish, and the verb means to fish with such a noose. The verb is said to have also been used in Ireland: Clare Island Survey: A Biological Survey of Clare Island, in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy (1915), page 21, "In Irish-English, “dulling for trout” is well known,—the fish as they lie still in a pool are snared with a noose of horsehair." However, the only citation I've found so far is:

  • 1903, Field and Stream, page 66:
    Play fair, boys. No dynamite nor "dulling." The deadly "dull," or wire noose, is a fatal weapon against a trout.

- -sche (discuss) 05:28, 5 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

The EDD says this was also used in Ireland, and derives it from Irish dul, dol (snare), saying "the phr. 'put a dull on the rope' is freq. heard". Elsewhere it is said "'dulling for trout' is well known". Century has a cite:
  • 1880 March 11, Forest and Stream:
    I hope that the barbarous practice called dulling has gone out of fashion.
- -sche (discuss) 02:17, 4 January 2022 (UTC)Reply