Noun
We decided to pick up the litter in the park.
Her desk was covered with a litter of legal documents. Verb
Paper and popcorn littered the streets after the parade.
a desk littered with old letters and bills
It is illegal to litter.
He had to pay a fine for littering.
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Noun
Archaeologists also found a number of other artifacts at the site – including the bones of a different dog, the remains of a young pig, around 33 intact drinking cups and a bronze bowl, though Verbrugge characterized those discoveries as settlement waste or litter rather than ritual offerings.—Andrea Margolis, FOXNews.com, 7 Apr. 2025 But a happy life is more than just giving a cat high-quality food and litter.—Bestreviews, Mercury News, 4 Apr. 2025
Verb
Her symptoms include vomiting up clots of hair, bile and sewing pins; making scary pronouncements in a guttural voice that is not her own; and being unusually attractive to wasps, whose carcasses litter her bedclothes.—Sarah Lyall, New York Times, 5 Apr. 2025 Winds can be powerful enough to jostle cars, topple power lines and litter debris on the ground.—Brittney Melton, NPR, 4 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for litter
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English, from Anglo-French litere, from lit bed, from Latin lectus — more at lie
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