Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • To cut; carve; engrave; sculpture.
  • To flense, flay, or take the skin and blubber from, as a seal.
  • noun The skin of a seal removed with the blubber adhering to it.
  • Abbreviations of the Latin sculpsit, he (or she) engraved or carved (it): also sc. and sculps.
  • of sculptor;
  • of sculptural
  • of sculpture.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • transitive verb Obs. or Humorous. To sculpture; to carve; to engrave.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb obsolete To sculpture; to carve or engrave.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

See sculptor.

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Examples

  • Like a magical tale! thanks for sahering it sculp Says:

    Knievel’s Wild Ride 2006

  • July 3rd, 2006 at 7: 48 pm wow great pictures sculp Says:

    Animals Closeups 2006

  • However, these new underpants have not had the benefit of time to mould and sculp themselves to my cheeks.

    toastcrumbs Diary Entry toastcrumbs 2007

  • At his left hip on a richly sculp-ted baldrick was carved a dagger with an ornate gilded hilt.

    Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine 2003

  • The core of the tradition is the “canon of proportions,” which has its antecedents in Egyptian theory of sculp - ture and its descendants in the formulations for art by artists such as Dürer, Leonardo, and Le Corbusier.

    CREATIVITY IN ART MILTON C. NAHM 1968

  • The point of it is that countless earlier treatises applied the principle of imitation but only to a particular group of arts — some to poetry, others to painting and sculp - ture.

    MIMESIS W. TATARKIEWICZ 1968

  • Greece; it finds expression in its literature and philoso - phy (except that of Plato), and its influence can be traced in the sad dignity of the farewell scenes sculp - tured on many tombs.

    SIN AND SALVATION S. G. F. BRANDON 1968

  • While crafts produce useful and necessary objects, the function of painting, sculp - ture, and poetry is to keep things in human memory.

    CLASSIFICATION OF THE ARTS W. TATARKIEWICZ 1968

  • What one person finds beautiful in women, in clothes, in buildings, in sculp - ture, in music, may not appear beautiful at all to another who is older or younger or is from a different ethnic group or “subculture.”

    Dictionary of the History of Ideas MONROE C. BEARDSLEY 1968

  • Like Pythagoras 'reduction of “woodland notes wild” to mathematical ratio, the writers within this tradition have tried to make of painting and sculp - ture arts wholly intelligible in mathematical terms.

    CREATIVITY IN ART MILTON C. NAHM 1968

Comments

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  • To separate hide and fat from a carcass, as of a seal.

    December 10, 2007