a. Capable of, or fit for, being cultivated; capable or becoming cultured. London Spectator. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Of or pertaining to culture. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ F. culture, L. cultura, fr. colere to till, cultivate; of uncertain origin. Cf. Colony. ]
If vain our toil
We ought to blame the culture, not the soil. Pepe. [ 1913 Webster ]
What the Greeks expressed by their
The list of all the items of the general life of a people represents that whole which we call its culture. Tylor. [ 1913 Webster ]
☞ The word is used adjectively with the above senses in many phrases, such as: culture medium, any one of the various mixtures of gelatin, meat extracts, etc., in which organisms cultivated; culture flask, culture oven, culture tube, gelatin culture, plate culture, etc. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
Culture fluid,
Culture medium
v. t.
They came . . . into places well inhabited and cultured. Usher. [ 1913 Webster ]
a.
The sense of beauty in nature, even among cultured people, is less often met with than other mental endowments. I. Taylor. [ 1913 Webster ]
The cunning hand and cultured brain. Whittier. [ 1913 Webster ]
. (Surv.) The artificial features of a district as distinguished from the natural. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
a. Having no culture. [ 1913 Webster ]
. A myth accounting for the discovery of arts and sciences or the advent of a higher civilization, as in the Prometheus myth. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
n.
The culturists, by which term I mean not those who esteem culture (as what intelligent man does not&unr_;) but those its exclusive advocates who recommend it as the panacea for all the ills of humanity, for its effects in cultivating the whole man. J. C. Shairp [ 1913 Webster ]
a. [ See Cultus cod. ] Bad, worthless; no good. [ Northwestern U. S. ]
“A bad horse, cultus [ no good ] !” he said, beating it with his whip. F. H. Balch. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]