- Also called: widow's weeds
a widow's black mourning clothes
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025
weeds /widz/USA pronunciation n. [plural]
- Clothingblack mourning garments.
- clothing.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
weed1 /wid/USA pronunciation
n.
v.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025- Botany[countable] an undesirable or unwanted plant growing wild, esp. one that takes food or nourishment from a crop, lawn, or flower bed.
- [countable][Slang.]a cigarette.
- Drugs the weed, [uncountable]
- Informal Termstobacco.
- Slang Termsmarijuana.
v.
- Botanyto free from weeds: [~ + object]to weed a garden.[no object]She was weeding in the garden.
- to remove as being unwanted or unneeded: [~ + out + object]The coach had to weed out the inexperienced players.[~ + object + out]to weed them out.
weed1
(wēd),USA pronunciation n.
v.t.
v.i.
weed′less, adj.
weed′like′, adj.
weed2 (wēd),USA pronunciation n.
Weed (wēd),USA pronunciation n.
- Botanya valueless plant growing wild, esp. one that grows on cultivated ground to the exclusion or injury of the desired crop.
- Botanyany undesirable or troublesome plant, esp. one that grows profusely where it is not wanted:The vacant lot was covered with weeds.
- [Informal.]a cigarette or cigar.
- Drugs, Slang Terms[Slang.]a marijuana cigarette.
- a thin, ungainly person or animal.
- a wretched or useless animal, esp. a horse unfit for racing or breeding purposes.
- Drugs the weed:
- Informal Termstobacco.
- Slang Termsmarijuana.
v.t.
- Botanyto free from weeds or troublesome plants;
root out weeds from:to weed a garden. - Botanyto root out or remove (a weed or weeds), as from a garden (often fol. by out):to weed out crab grass from a lawn.
- to remove as being undesirable, inefficient, or superfluous (often fol. by out):to weed out inexperienced players.
- to rid (something) of undesirable or superfluous elements.
v.i.
- to remove weeds or the like.
- bef. 900; Middle English wede, Old English wēod; cognate with Old Saxon wiod weed, Middle Dutch wiet fern
weed′like′, adj.
weed2 (wēd),USA pronunciation n.
- Clothing weeds, mourning garments:widow's weeds.
- Clothinga mourning band of black crepe or cloth, as worn on a man's hat or coat sleeve.
- ClothingOften, weeds. [Archaic.]
- a garment:clad in rustic weeds.
- clothing.
- bef. 900; Middle English wede, Old English wǣd, (ge)wǣde garment, clothing; cognate with Old Saxon wād, gewādi, Old High German wāt, gewāti clothing; compare wadmal
Weed (wēd),USA pronunciation n.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
any plant that grows wild and profusely, esp one that grows among cultivated plants, depriving them of space, food, etc marijuana - the weed ⇒
tobacco a thin or unprepossessing person an inferior horse, esp one showing signs of weakness of constitution
to remove (useless or troublesome plants) from (a garden, etc)
a black crepe band worn to indicate mourning
See also weeds
'weeds' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
atrazine
- bensulide
- borax pentahydrate
- choke
- cockle
- cocklebur
- couch grass
- crop rotation
- cultivator
- dalapon
- darnel
- dichlorophenoxyacetic acid
- diquat
- disk harrow
- dock
- ecofallow
- eradicate
- flame cultivator
- flame gun
- grass carp
- ground cover
- grow
- growth
- harrow
- herbicide
- hoe
- horseweed
- king devil
- mat
- matted
- no-tillage
- nurse crop
- nut grass
- obstinate
- overgrow
- overrun
- picloram
- pleuston
- present participle
- pull
- ragged
- rampant
- rank
- rich
- rise
- rotary hoe
- rotary plough
- rough
- sandbur
- smartweed