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mow
1[moh]
verb (used with object)
to cut down (grass, grain, etc.) with a scythe or a machine.
to cut grass, grain, etc., from.
to mow the lawn.
verb (used without object)
to cut down grass, grain, etc.
verb phrase
mow down
to destroy or kill indiscriminately or in great numbers, as troops in battle.
to defeat, overwhelm, or overcome.
The team mowed down its first four opponents.
to knock down.
mow
2[mou]
noun
a heap or pile of hay or of sheaves of grain in a barn.
the place in a barn where hay, sheaves of grain, etc., are stored.
verb (used with object)
Chiefly Northern and North Midland U.S., to store (hay) in a barn.
mow
3[mou, moh]
noun
a wry or derisive grimace.
verb (used without object)
to make mows, mouths, or grimaces.
mow
1/ məʊ /
verb
to cut down (grass, crops, etc) with a hand implement or machine
(tr) to cut the growing vegetation of (a field, lawn, etc)
mow
2/ maʊ /
noun
the part of a barn where hay, straw, etc, is stored
the hay, straw, etc, stored
mow
3/ maʊ /
noun
an archaic word for grimace
Other Word Forms
- mower noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of mow1
Origin of mow2
Origin of mow3
Word History and Origins
Origin of mow1
Origin of mow2
Origin of mow3
Example Sentences
But mowing doesn’t completely destroy the grasses; it just gives them a haircut.
But no such luck — the adjacent grassy areas managed by the National Park Service obviously hadn’t been mowed in months, yet another reminder of what the regime’s priorities are.
Tom mowed lawns, washed cars and ran a lemonade stand.
He reconsidered his opinion in 2021, writing for Salon that “Trumpism has become terrifyingly proud of its capacity to mow down democratic norms and resculpt them into steaming piles of excrement.”
“They can mow down a kelp forest and then actually remain in that ecosystem without a food source,” said Prentice, a marine biologist and study co-author.
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