aughts plural: the ten year period from 2000 through 2009
By the middle of the aughts, … the percentage of 26-year-olds living with their parents reached 20 percent, nearly double what it was in 1970.—Don Peck
Did you know?
"If you know aught which does behove my knowledge / Thereof to be inform'd, imprison't not / In ignorant concealment," Polixenes begs Camillo in William Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale, employing the "anything" sense of aught. Shakespeare didn't coin the pronoun aught, which has been a part of the English language since before the 12th century, but he did put it to frequent use. Writers today may be less likely to use aught than were their literary predecessors, but the pronoun does continue to turn up occasionally. Aught can also be a noun meaning "zero," and "the aughts" is heard occasionally for the decade at the beginning of a century (say, 1900-1909 or 2000-2009) in which the penultimate digit is a zero.
Noun
for dates, the year is automatically listed as a pair of aughts, so the user has to scroll down to the correct figure
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Noun
What happens when the parasitic entity of the Smile universe heads to the world of professional fashion modeling in the early aughts?—Nick Romano, Entertainment Weekly, 16 June 2026 Multiple experts predict that higher stretch skinny jeans will be on their way back into the trend cycle for upcoming seasons—albeit in a different form than the skinnies from the aughts.—Sarah Jones, Footwear News, 12 June 2026 Summer wedges—a hallmark of late-’90s and early-aughts dressing—have returned with fresh appeal.—Laura Jackson, Vogue, 11 June 2026 Take Ashley Tisdale French, for instance, who had some of the most memorable fun-with-fashion moments in the aughts.—Tanisha Bhat, PEOPLE, 9 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for aught
Word History
Etymology
Pronoun and Adverb
Middle English, from Old English āwiht, from ā ever + wiht creature, thing — more at aye, wight
Noun
alteration (resulting from false division of a naught) of naught
First Known Use
Pronoun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Adverb
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above