The difference between Hull and Peel

When used as nouns, hull means the outer covering of a fruit or seed, whereas peel means the skin or outer layer of a fruit, vegetable, etc.

When used as verbs, hull means to remove the outer covering of a fruit or seed, whereas peel means to remove the skin or outer covering of.


check bellow for the other definitions of Hull and Peel

  1. Hull as a noun:

    The outer covering of a fruit or seed

  1. Hull as a verb:

    To remove the outer covering of a fruit or seed.

    Examples:

    "She sat on the back porch hulling peanuts."

  1. Hull as a noun:

    The body or frame of a vessel, such as a ship or plane.

  2. Hull as a noun (mathematics, geometry, of a set A):

    The smallest set that possesses a particular property (such as convexity) and contains every point of A; slightly more formally, the intersection of all sets which possess the specified property and of which A is a subset.

    Examples:

    "The orthogonal convex hull of an orthogonal polygon is the smallest orthogonally convex polygon that encloses the original polygon."

    "holomorphically convex hull; affine hull; injective hull"

  1. Hull as a verb (obsolete, intransitive, nautical):

    To drift; to be carried by the impetus of wind or water on the ship's hull alone, with sails furled.

  2. Hull as a verb (transitive):

    To hit (a ship) in the hull with cannon fire etc.

  1. Peel as a verb (transitive):

    To remove the skin or outer covering of.

    Examples:

    "I sat by my sister's bed, peeling oranges for her."

  2. Peel as a verb (transitive):

    To remove something from the outer or top layer of.

    Examples:

    "I peeled (the skin from) a banana and ate it hungrily."

    "We peeled the old wallpaper off in strips where it was hanging loose."

  3. Peel as a verb (intransitive):

    To become detached, come away, especially in flakes or strips; to shed skin in such a way.

    Examples:

    "I had been out in the sun too long, and my nose was starting to peel."

  4. Peel as a verb (intransitive):

    To remove one's clothing.

    Examples:

    "The children peeled by the side of the lake and jumped in."

  5. Peel as a verb (intransitive):

    To move, separate (off or away).

    Examples:

    "The scrum-half peeled off and made for the touchlines."

  1. Peel as a noun (usually, uncountable):

    The skin or outer layer of a fruit, vegetable, etc.

  2. Peel as a noun (countable, rugby):

    The action of peeling away from a formation.

  3. Peel as a noun (countable):

    A cosmetic preparation designed to remove dead skin or to exfoliate.

  1. Peel as a noun (obsolete):

    A stake.

  2. Peel as a noun (obsolete):

    A fence made of stakes; a stockade.

  3. Peel as a noun (archaic):

    A small tower, fort, or castle; a keep.

  1. Peel as a noun:

    A shovel or similar instrument, now especially a pole with a flat disc at the end used for removing pizza or loaves of bread from a baker's oven.

  2. Peel as a noun:

    A T-shaped implement used by printers and bookbinders for hanging wet sheets of paper on lines or poles to dry.

  3. Peel as a noun (archaic, US):

    The blade of an oar.

  1. Peel as a noun (Scotland, curling):

    An equal or match; a draw.

  2. Peel as a noun (curling):

    A takeout which removes a stone from play as well as the delivered stone.

  1. Peel as a verb (curling):

    To play a peel shot.

  1. Peel as a verb (croquet):

    To send through a hoop (of a ball other than one's own).

  1. Peel as a verb:

    to sound loudly.

  1. Peel as a verb (archaic, transitive):

    To plunder; to pillage, rob.