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scalp

noun

  1. anatomical area bordered by the face anteriorly and the neck to the sides and posteriorly
L25422 on Wikidata ↗

verb

  1. to sell illegally
  2. to remove an upper part from
L25423 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /skælp/

noun

Etymology: From Middle English scalp, skalp, scalpe (“crown of the head; skull”). Originally a northern word, and therefore probably from a North Germanic source, although the sense-development is unclear; compare Sylt North Frisian Skolp (“dandruff”), Old Norse skálpr (“sheath”), Old Swedish skalp, Dutch schelp (“shell”).

  1. The top of the head; the skull.
  2. The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from.

    By the bare scalpe of Robin Hoods fat Fryer, / This fellow were a King, for our wilde faction.

    The original titanium mesh plate that was inserted in the summer of 2010 was removed last June since it was causing his scalp to break down.

  3. The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from.

    Some tribes used to collect scalps to prove how many of the enemy they had killed in battle.

    The most disturbing thing about Disneyland is seeing all those smiling people walking around wearing Mickey Mouse's severed scalp.

  4. The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from.

    He bears for Arms : Argent, on a chevron invected gules, between two bugle-horns sable, stringed of the second in chief, and the attires of a stag affixed to the scalp in base of the third, two fasces chevronways or.

  5. A victory, especially at the expense of someone else.

    [At the American State Convention in 1856 the Hon E. M. Yerger of Yazoo said that] he came up to the great council fire of his people, not like his friends Cobb, Hillyer and Brooke, with no scalps at his girdle that he had had a fight and a glorious victory.

    His mind is quick to perceive a weak place in the enemy's armor, as he glances over the exchanges, and when he "goes for" a solitary foe he always returns with the scalp hanging at his girdle.

  6. A bed or stratum of shellfish.
  7. The top; the summit.

    the snowy scalp of Ben Cruachan

verb

Etymology: From Middle English scalp, skalp, scalpe (“crown of the head; skull”). Originally a northern word, and therefore probably from a North Germanic source, although the sense-development is unclear; compare Sylt North Frisian Skolp (“dandruff”), Old Norse skálpr (“sheath”), Old Swedish skalp, Dutch schelp (“shell”).

  1. To remove the scalp (part of the head from where the hair grows), by brutal act or accident.

    Next morning, the Indians attacked us and one of our hunters, George Huffman, was killed and scalped. As soon as Baldwin heard the shooting, he came to our assistance.

  2. To resell, especially tickets, usually for an inflated price, often illegally.

    Tickets were being scalped for $300.

    Tickets sold online through Craigslist, eBay, and other forums, where the purchaser cannot physically see them, run a greater risk of being counterfeit—but counterfeiters have been known to scalp tickets in person outside the venue as well, […]

  3. To bet on opposing competitors so as to make a profit from the bookmaker.

    The only sure thing about scalping the Series today is that the scalper is paying the bookie a greater profit because he is making a greater number of bets.

  4. On an open outcry exchange trading floor, to buy and sell rapidly for one's own account, aiming to buy from a seller and a little later sell to a buyer, making a small profit from the difference (roughly the amount of the bid/offer spread, or less).
  5. To screen or sieve ore before further processing.

    scalped ore

  6. To remove the skin of.

    We must […]"scalp" the whole lid [of the eye].

  7. To remove the grass from.
  8. To destroy the political influence of.
  9. To brush the hairs or fuzz from (wheat grains, etc.) in the process of high milling.
scalp — meaning, definition (noun, verb) · Vinony