canvas

1 of 2

noun

can·​vas ˈkan-vəs How to pronounce canvas (audio)
variants or less commonly canvass
plural canvases also canvasses
Synonyms of canvasnext
1
: a firm closely woven cloth usually of linen, hemp, or cotton used for clothing and formerly much used for tents and sails
2
a
: a piece of cloth backed or framed as a surface for a painting
an artist's canvas
also : the painting on such a surface
b
: something likened to a painter's canvas
… just up the driveway is an extraordinary piece of garden design. [Ruth] Bancroft is the artist and her canvas is a three-acre patch of land in the midst of suburbia.Harriet Chiang
In addition to the cover-up work, [Miryam] Lumpini will turn the dimpled canvas of a young man's back into a magnificent phoenix.Allure
The birds were moving art on a canvas of sky and water and endless prairie.Shannon Tompkins
c
: the background, setting, or scope of a historical or fictional account or narrative
the crowded canvas of history
3
: a piece of canvas used for a particular purpose
a hammock made of canvas
4
: tent
also : a group of tents
5
: a set of sails : sail
sailing under full canvas
6
: a stiff material (as of coarse cloth or plastic) that has regular meshes for working with a needle (as in needlepoint)
7
: the canvas-covered floor of a boxing or wrestling ring
canvaslike adjective

canvas

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verb

canvased or canvassed; canvasing or canvassing

transitive verb

: to cover, line, or furnish with canvas

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Canvas vs. Canvass

The much more common verb, with meanings that include "to examine in detail" and "to ask (the people in an area) for their opinions or to request their support," is usually spelled canvass but occassionally is also spelled canvas.

Synonyms of canvas

Examples of canvas in a Sentence

Noun a tent made of canvas Use a canvas to cover the boat. The museum has several canvases by Rubens.
Recent Examples on the Web
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Noun
This Laura Geller hydrating primer creates a silky-smooth canvas that grips your foundation for all-day wear. Madeline Merinuk, PEOPLE, 20 June 2026 Amid canvas tents and retro campers, the large dining room serves craft cocktails and juicy steaks sourced from the Malarkey family ranch. Sierra Vandervort, Travel + Leisure, 20 June 2026 In the 12th, a combo of sledgehammer rights sent Louis to the canvas for good, his first time being knocked out. Vann R. Newkirk Ii, The Atlantic, 19 June 2026 Her blank canvas in Naperville is a white brick wall that measures 124 feet long and 25 feet tall. Steve Metsch, Chicago Tribune, 19 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for canvas

Word History

Etymology

Noun and Verb

Middle English canevas, from Anglo-French canevas, chanevaz, from Vulgar Latin *cannabaceus hempen, from Latin cannabis hemp — more at cannabis

First Known Use

Noun

13th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

1556, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of canvas was in the 13th century

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Cite this Entry

“Canvas.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/canvas. Accessed 23 Jun. 2026.

Kids Definition

canvas

noun
can·​vas
ˈkan-vəs
1
a
: a strong cloth of hemp, flax, or cotton used for clothing and formerly much used for tents and sails
b
: a piece of cloth used as a surface for painting
also : a painting on such a surface
2
: something made of canvas
3
: a stiff material (as of coarse cloth or plastic) that has regular meshes for working with a needle (as in needlepoint)

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