dell

[del] /dɛl/
noun
1.
a small, usually wooded valley; vale.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English delle, Old English dell; akin to dale

Dell

[del] /dɛl/
noun
1.
a male or female given name.

dell'

[del] /dɛl/
1.
(in names of Italian derivation) an elided form of della: Giovanni dell' Anguillara.

dells

[delz] /dɛlz/
plural noun
1.
Origin
by construal as a plural of dell
British Dictionary definitions for dell

dell

/dɛl/
noun
1.
a small, esp wooded hollow
Word Origin
Old English; related to Middle Low German delle valley; compare dale
Word Origin and History for dell
n.

Old English dell "dell, hollow, dale" (perhaps lost and then borrowed in Middle English from cognate Middle Dutch/Middle Low German delle), from Proto-Germanic *daljo (cf. German Delle "dent, depression," Gothic ib-dalja "slope of a mountain"); related to dale (q.v.).

rogue's cant 16c.-17c. for "a young girl of the vagrant class," of uncertain origin.

A Dell is a yonge wenche, able for generation, and not yet knowen or broken by the vpright man. ... [W]hen they have beene lyen with all by the vpright man then they be Doxes, and no Dells. [Thomas Harman, "A Caveat or Warning for Common Cursitors," 1567]