Culture /(k?l"t?r; 135)/

Cul·ture

Culture

n.
  1. The act or practice of cultivating, or of preparing the earth for seed and raising crops by tillage; as, the culture of the soil.
  2. The act of, or any labor or means employed for, training, disciplining, or refining the moral and intellectual nature of man; as, the culture of the mind.
    If vain our toil We ought to blame the culture, not the soil.
    — Pepe.
  3. The state of being cultivated; result of cultivation; physical improvement; enlightenment and discipline acquired by mental and moral training; civilization; refinement in manners and taste.
    What the Greeks expressed by their paidei`a, the Romans by their humanitas, we less happily try to express by the more artificial word culture.
    — J. C. Shairp.
    The list of all the items of the general life of a people represents that whole which we call its culture.
    — Tylor.
  4. The cultivation of bacteria or other organisms (such as fungi or eukaryotic cells from mulitcellular organisms) in artificial media or under artificial conditions. (Biol.)
  5. Those details of a map, collectively, which do not represent natural features of the area delineated, as names and the symbols for towns, roads, houses, bridges, meridians, and parallels. (Cartography)

Phrases & Compounds

Culture fluid
a fluid in which microscopic organisms are made to develop, either for purposes of study or as a means of modifying their virulence. If the fluid is gelled by, for example, the use of agar, it then is called, depending on the vessel in which the gelled medium is contained, a plate, a slant, or a stab.

Culture

v. t.

imp. & p. p. Cultured; p. pr. & vb. n. Culturing

  1. To cultivate; to educate.
    They came . . . into places well inhabited and cultured.