Reed

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This word is acceptable for play in the US & UK dictionaries that are being used in the following games:

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
  • n. Any of various tall perennial grasses, especially of the genera Phragmites or Arundo, having hollow stems, broad leaves, and large plumelike terminal panicles.
  • n. The stalk of any of these plants.
  • n. A collection of these stalks: reed for making baskets.
  • n. Music A primitive wind instrument made of a hollow reed stalk.
  • n. Music A flexible strip of cane or metal set into the mouthpiece or air opening of certain instruments to produce tone by vibrating in response to a stream of air.
  • n. Music An instrument, such as an oboe or clarinet, that is fitted with a reed.
  • n. A narrow movable frame fitted with reed or metal strips that separate the warp threads in weaving.
  • n. Architecture A reeding.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • n. Any of various types of tall stiff perennial grass-like plants growing together in groups near water.
  • n. The hollow stem of these plants.
  • n. Part of the mouthpiece of certain woodwind instruments, comprising of a thin piece of wood or metal which shakes very quickly to produce sound when a musician blows over it.
  • n. A musical instrument such as the clarinet or oboe, which produces sound when a musician blows on the reed.
  • n. reeding
  • v. To mill or mint with reeding.
  • v. Simple past tense and past participle of ree.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • adj. Red.
  • v. Same as rede.
  • n. The fourth stomach of a ruminant; rennet.
  • n. A name given to many tall and coarse grasses or grasslike plants, and their slender, often jointed, stems, such as the various kinds of bamboo, and especially the common reed of Europe and North America (Phragmites communis).
  • n. A musical instrument made of the hollow joint of some plant; a rustic or pastoral pipe.
  • n. An arrow, as made of a reed.
  • n. Straw prepared for thatching a roof.
  • n.
  • n. A small piece of cane or wood attached to the mouthpiece of certain instruments, and set in vibration by the breath. In the clarinet it is a single fiat reed; in the oboe and bassoon it is double, forming a compressed tube.
  • n. One of the thin pieces of metal, the vibration of which produce the tones of a melodeon, accordeon, harmonium, or seraphine; also attached to certain sets or registers of pipes in an organ.
  • n. A frame having parallel flat stripe of metal or reed, between which the warp threads pass, set in the swinging lathe or batten of a loom for beating up the weft; a sley. See Batten.
  • n. A tube containing the train of powder for igniting the charge in blasting.
  • n. Same as Reeding.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • n. Any tall broad-leafed grass growing on the margins of streams or in other wet places; especially, any grass of one of the genera Phragmites, Arundo, or Ammophila.
  • n. Some one of other more or less similar plants. See phrases below.
  • n. A musical pipe of reed or cane, having a mouthpiece made by slitting the tube near a joint, and usually several finger-holes; a rustic or pastoral pipe; hence, figuratively, pastoral poetry. See cut under pipe.
  • n. In music: In musical instruments of the oboe and clarinet classes, and in all kinds of organs, a thin elastic plate or tongue of reed, wood, or metal, so fitted to an opening into a pipe as nearly to close it, and so arranged that, when a current of air is directed through the opening, the reed is drawn into or driven against it so as to close it, but immediately springs back by its own elasticity, only to be pressed forward again by the air, thus producing a tone, either directly by its own vibrations or indirectly by the sympathetic vibrations of the column of air in the pipe.
  • n. In reed-instruments of the oboe class, and in both pipe- and reed-organs, the entire mechanism immediately surrounding the reed proper, consisting of the tube or box the opening or eschallot of which the reed itself covers or fills, together with any other attachments, like the tuning-wire of reed-pipes. (See reed-organ and reed-pipe.) In the clarinet the analogous part is called the beak or mouthpiece.
  • n. Any reed-instrument as a whole, tike an oboe or a clarinet: as, the reeds of an orchestra.
  • n. In organ-building, same as reed-stop.
  • n. A missile weapon; an arrow or a javelin: used poetically.
  • n. Reeds or straw prepared for thatching; thatch: a general term: as, a bundle of reed.
  • n. A long slender elastic rod of whalebone, ratan, or steel, of which several are inserted in a woman's skirt to expand or stiffen it.
  • n. In mining, any hollow plant-stem which can be filled with powder and put into the cavity left. by the withdrawal of the needle, to set off the charge at the bottom. Such devices are nearly or entirely superseded by the safety-fuse. Also called spire.
  • n. An instrument used for pressing down the threads of the woof in tapestry, so as to keep the surface well together.
  • n. A weavers' instrument for separating the threads of the warp, and for beating the weft up to the web.
  • n. In heraldry, a bearing representing a weavers' reed. See slay.
  • n. A Hebrew and Assyrian unit, of length, equal to 6 cubits, generally taken as being from 124 to 130 inches.
  • n. Same as rennet-bag.
  • n. In arch., carp., etc., a small convex molding; in the plural, same as reeding, 2.
  • To thatch. Compare reed, n., 6.
  • In carp., arch., etc., to fashion into, or decorate with, reeds or reeding.
  • An obsolete form of red (still extant in the surname Reed).
  • n. An obsolete form of read.
  • To draw (warp-threads) through the reed of a loom.
  • To furnish with reeds, as an organ.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • n. United States journalist who reported on the October Revolution from Petrograd in 1917; founded the Communist Labor Party in America in 1919; is buried in the Kremlin in Moscow (1887-1920)
  • n. a vibrator consisting of a thin strip of stiff material that vibrates to produce a tone when air streams over it
  • n. a musical instrument that sounds by means of a vibrating reed
  • n. United States physician who proved that yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes (1851-1902)
  • n. tall woody perennial grasses with hollow slender stems especially of the genera Arundo and Phragmites
  • Verb Form
    reeded    reeding    reeds   
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Cross Reference
    Variant
    rede    batten    reeding   
    Form
    reed organ    reedy    reed bunting   
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    Red    rennet    rush    flag    bent    tongue   
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Aristide    Bede    Ede    Gilead    Mead    Meade    Read    Reid    Sinead    Snead   
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    bamboo    weed    moss    grass    twig    straw    vine    vegetation    brush    bush