dictionary.com

Dictionary.com | Meanings & Definitions of English Words

  • ️@Dictionarycom

noun

  1. a soft, white, downy substance consisting of the hairs or fibers attached to the seeds of plants belonging to the genus

    Gossypium,

    of the mallow family,

    used in making fabrics, thread, wadding, etc.

  2. the plant itself, having spreading branches and broad, lobed leaves.

  3. such plants collectively as a cultivated crop.

  4. cloth, thread, a garment, etc., of cotton.

  5. any soft, downy substance resembling cotton, but growing on other plants.

verb (used without object)

  1. Informal. to get along; to agree (usually in the negative and followed by with ):

    She didn't cotton with hypocrites.

    I don't cotton with conventional wisdom on this.

  2. Obsolete. to prosper or succeed.

verb phrase

    1. to come to a full understanding of; grasp or realize:

      Once you cotton on to this principle, you see examples of it everywhere.

      Eventually both sets of parents cottoned on to the fact that the kids were lying about “studying” together.

    2. to become fond of; begin to like:

      I cottoned to the new girl right away when I saw she knew how to muck out a stall.

    3. to approve of; agree with:

      Some organic gardeners freeze the insects in a container and then put them out for the birds, but your kids may not cotton to this idea.

noun

  1. John, 1584–1652,

    U.S. clergyman, colonist, and author (grandfather of Cotton Mather).

/ ˈkɒtən /

noun

  1. any of various herbaceous plants and shrubs of the malvaceous genus Gossypium, such as sea-island cotton, cultivated in warm climates for the fibre surrounding the seeds and the oil within the seeds

    See also sea-island cotton

  2. the soft white downy fibre of these plants: used to manufacture textiles

  3. cotton plants collectively, as a cultivated crop

    1. a cloth or thread made from cotton fibres

    2. ( as modifier )

      a cotton dress

  4. any substance, such as kapok ( silk cotton ), resembling cotton but obtained from other plants

/ ˈkɒtən /

noun

  1. CottonSirHenry19071987MBritishSPORT AND GAMES: golfer

    Sir Henry. 1907–87, English golfer: three times winner of the British Open (1934, 1937, 1948)

Discover More

Derived Forms

  • ˈcottony, adjective

Discover More

Other Words From

  • half-cot·ton adjective
  • sem·i·cot·ton noun
  • un·cot·toned adjective

Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of cotton1

First recorded in

1250–1300; Middle English cotoun, cot(e)in, from Old French coton, from Arabic quṭun, quṭn

Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of cotton1

C14: from Old French coton, from Arabic dialect qutun, from Arabic qutn