A monk's hood that can be pulled forward to cover the face; a robe with such a hood attached to it.
c.1536, William Tyndale, An Exposycyon vpon the v. vi. vii. Chapters of Mathewe, An Exposycyon of the syxte Capiter,
And therfore al our monkes whose professyon was neuer to eate fleshe, set vp the Pope and toke dispensacyons bothe for that faste and also for theyr strayte rules, and made theyr strayte rules as wyde as the hodes of theyr cowles.
The hermit, as if wishing to answer to the confidence of his guest, threw back his cowl, and showed a round bullet head belonging to a man in the prime of life.
I’m sure I’m very sorry, but it’s always this way when the wind’s in the east, sir, and we’ve tried ever so many sorts of cowls and chimney-pots, you’d be surprised.
(nautical) A ship's ventilator with a bell-shaped top which can be swivelled to catch the wind and force it below.
1902 January–March, Joseph Conrad, “Typhoon”, in George R. Halkett, editor, The Pall Mall Magazine, volume XXVI, London: Printed by Hazell, Watson & Viney, →OCLC, chapter II, page 101:
He flung himself at the port ventilator as though he meant to tear it out bodily and toss it overboard. All he did was to move the cowl round a few inches, with an enormous expenditure of force, and seemed spent in the effort.
But he by wild and way […] Rode till the star above the wakening sun, Beside that tower where Percivale was cowl’d[i.e. became a monk], Glanced from the rosy forehead of the dawn.
1945, Robert W. Service, chapter 8, in Ploughman of the Moon, New York: Dodd, Mead, page 249:
The sky was cowled with cloud, all except a narrow chink where it met the horizon.
To wrap or form (something made of fabric) like a cowl.
1964, Hortense Calisher, “Extreme Magic”, in Extreme Magic: A Novella and Other Stories, Boston: Little, Brown, page 208:
When he came downstairs from the bar with the whiskies, she had found a sweater for herself and had cowled a thick raincoat over Sligo.
1972, Edna O’Brien, Night, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, published 1987, page 70:
As the evenings got colder, he used to reach up and pull down the green baize cloth, and cowl it around himself and wear it like a kind of igloo.
A caul(the amnion which encloses the foetus before birth, especially that part of it which sometimes shrouds a baby’s head at birth).
1896, I. K. Friedman, “A Coat of One Color”, in The Lucky Number, Chicago: Way and Williams, page 55:
According to one of his accounts—and his accounts varied with his audience—he was the seventh son of a seventh son, and born with a cowl on his face […]