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BNC: 14782 COCA: 9661

mow

2 ENTRIES FOUND:
1 mow /ˈmoʊ/ verb
mows; mowed; mowed or mown /ˈmoʊn/ ; mowing
1 mow
/ˈmoʊ/
verb
mows; mowed; mowed or mown /ˈmoʊn/ ; mowing
Learner's definition of MOW
[+ object]
: to cut (something, such as grass) with a machine or a blade刈;割;修剪

mow down

[phrasal verb]
mow (someone) down or mow down (someone) informal
: to kill or knock down (a person or many people) in a sudden and violent way(突然地、暴力地)杀死,撂倒

— mower

/ˈmowɚ/ noun, plural mowers [count]
2 mow /ˈmoʊ/ noun
plural mows
2 mow
/ˈmoʊ/
noun
plural mows
Learner's definition of MOW
[count] informal
: an act of mowing something (such as a lawn)修剪;割;刈
BNC: 14782 COCA: 9661

mow

1 of 4

noun (1)

1
: a piled-up stack (as of hay or fodder)
also : a pile of hay or grain in a barn
2
: the part of a barn where hay or straw is stored

mow

2 of 4

verb (1)

mowed; mowed or mown ˈmōn How to pronounce mow (audio) ; mowing

transitive verb

1
a
: to cut down with a scythe or sickle or machine
b
: to cut the standing herbage (such as grass) of
mow the lawn
2
a(1)
: to kill or destroy in great numbers or mercilessly
machine guns mowed down the enemy
(2)
: to cause to fall : knock down
b
: to overcome swiftly and decisively : rout
mowed down the opposing team

intransitive verb

: to cut down standing herbage (such as grass)
mower noun
mowed; mowing; mows

intransitive verb

: to make grimaces

Synonyms

Word History

Etymology

Noun (1)

Middle English, heap, stack, from Old English mūga; akin to Old Norse mūgi heap

Verb (1)

Middle English mowen, going back to Old English māwan (past participle māwen), going back to West Germanic *mēan- (whence, with a differing hiatus consonant, Old Frisian miā, miān "to mow," Middle Dutch maeyen, Old High German *māen), going back to an Indo-European verbal base *h2meh1- "reap, mow," whence also Greek amáō, amân "to reap, cut" (perhaps from *h2mh1-eh2-)

Note: Old English māwan is a Class VII strong verb (like cnāwan know entry 1, blāwan blow entry 1), though a weak verb in later Middle and Modern English and in other Germanic languages. The element *-eh1- in *h2meh1- has been treated as a suffix, with a parallel derivative *h2m-et- yielding Italo-Celtic *met-, in Latin metō, metere "to reap, harvest, cut off," Welsh medaf, medi "to reap," Middle Breton midiff, Breton mediñ, Middle Irish meithel "reaping party," Welsh medel. Hittite hamešha(nt)- "spring, harvest time" has also been connected with *h2meh1-, though with some dispute. Cf. aftermath, meadow.

Noun (2)

Middle English mowe, from Anglo-French mouwe, of Germanic origin; akin to Middle Dutch mouwe protruding lip

First Known Use

Noun (1)

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb (1)

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1a

Noun (2)

14th century, in the meaning defined above

Verb (2)

15th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of mow was before the 12th century
BNC: 14782 COCA: 9661

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