Currying != Generalized Partial Application?!

I had mistakenly learned that curry was a form of generalized partial application from the paper : Function Currying in Scheme by Jeffrey A. Meunier
and the Wikipedia entry (I should have known better), however I was mildly reprimanded for making this novice mistake in a recent paper submission to ICFP. There was a short post to the Scheme mailing list some time back summing up the problem.

In my paper I defined curry in Cat as:

  define curry : ('b ('A 'b -> 'C) -> ('A -> 'C)) { swap quote swap compose }

Whereas this really should have been called "partial-apply", "papply" or something comparable.
So the correct definition should have been:

  define papply : ('b ('A 'b -> 'C) -> ('A -> 'C)) { swap quote swap compose }
  define curry : (('A 'b -> 'C) -> ('b -> ('A -> 'C)) { quote [papply] compose } 

Has anyone else made this mistake? It seems to me that I have seen more incorrect definitions than correct ones.

P.S. Anyone here interested in the health of Wikipedia (I've given up), I'd suggest fixing the code examples and "intuitively ..." note.