Culm
|
- A culm was originally a stem of any type of plant. It is derived from a Latin root, culmus. It is now used mostly in its more technical botanical sense, where it specifically refers to the above-ground or aerial stems of grasses (Poaceae; including bamboos) and sedges (Cyperaceae).
- Culm (city) - a German name for Chelmno
- Culm was the old German name for a place in the former West Prussia. It is now known by the Polish: Czarze.
- Culm is also a term used for fine-grained waste anthracite coal. Until the invention of the camelback locomotive and its Wooten firebox in 1877, this was waste of no commercial value.
See also Kulm.