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Karakul
[ kar-uh-kuhl ]
noun
- one of an Asian breed of sheep having curly fleece that is black in the young and brown or gray in the adult: raised especially for lambskins used in the fur industry. Compare broadtail, Persian lamb.
- (sometimes lowercase) a Karakul lambskin.
karakul
/ ˈkærəkəl /
noun
- a breed of sheep of central Asia having coarse black, grey, or brown hair: the lambs have soft curled usually black hair
- the fur prepared from these lambs
Word History and Origins
Origin of Karakul1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Karakul1
Example Sentences
There was a big picture of a bearded man in a woolen Karakul hat on the cover.
In their place are elderly, ultra-Orthodox Jews wearing black overcoats and fedoras; south and central Asians with traditional karakul hats; and gaggles of merchants shouting in languages from across the world.
Most fur-bearing animals have never been domesticated, which makes raising a fox for the trim of a parka inherently crueler than aborting a karakul lamb for a wool cap, animal rights activists say.
When we reached a pasture between snow-capped mountains and saw Karakul Lake glittering in the distance, we got off.
“I am not a government supporter,” said Yadagar Karakul, a 30-year-old event coordinator.
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