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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Fromwell+‎head.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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wellhead(pluralwellheads)

  1. Theplacewhere aspringbreaksout of theground;thesourceofwaterfor astreamorwell.
  2. (figuratively)The source of something; afountainhead.
    • 1596,Edmund Spenser,“Book V, Canto IX”, inThe Faerie Queene.[],part II (books IV–VI), London:[][Richard Field] forWilliam Ponsonby,→OCLC,stanza 26,page303:
      [H]e likened was to awelhed/ Of euill words, and wicked ſclaunders by him ſhed.
    • 1932,D. H. Lawrence,“Painted Tombs of Tarquinia”, inEtruscan Places,New York: Viking, published1957,page113:
      [...] a bull was not merely a stud animal worth so much, due to go to the butcher in a little while. It was a vast wonder-beast, awell-headof the great, furnace-like passion that makes the worlds roll and the sun surge up [...]
  3. The surfacestructureof anoil welletc.

Derived terms

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