: a soft usually white fibrous substance composed of the hairs surrounding the seeds of various erect freely branching tropical plants (genus Gossypium) of the mallow family
b
: a plant producing cotton
especially: one grown for its cotton
c
: a crop of cotton
2
a
: fabric made of cotton
b
: yarn spun from cotton
3
: a downy cottony substance produced by various plants (such as the cottonwood)
… cottoned on to the fact that our children work furiously …—H. M. McLuhan
Did you know?
The noun cotton first appears in English in the late Middle Ages. It comes, via Anglo-French and Old Italian, from the Arabic word for cotton, quṭun or quṭn. In the 15th century, cotton acquired a verb use meaning "to form a nap on (cloth)." Though this verb sense is now obsolete, our modern-day use might have spun from it. In 1822, English philologist Robert Nares reported that cotton had been used to mean "to succeed" and speculated that this use came from "the finishing of cloth, which when it cottons, or rises to a regular nap, is nearly or quite complete." The meaning of cotton shifted from "to get on well" to "to get on well together," and eventually to the sense we know today, "to take a liking to." The "understand" sense appeared later, in the early 20th century.
Noun
They are in the field picking cotton.
She doesn't wear cotton in the winter. Verb
failed to cotton on to the fact that her senatorial campaign was going nowhere
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Noun
These towels are ultra-thin, sand-free microfiber essentials that shake clean instantly, dry three times faster than cotton, and fold down lightweight and compact for the ultimate travel-ready getaway.—Tory Johnson, ABC News, 28 Mar. 2026 The firm has over 70 years of history, and the family got its start with cotton syndication in the United Kingdom.—Nick Wooten, Dallas Morning News, 28 Mar. 2026
Verb
OnlyFans was founded in 2016 by Guy Stokely and his son, entrepreneur Tim Stokely, who cottoned onto the notion of enabling influencers to monetize their content themselves, as The New York Times described in a 2019 company profile.—Theresa Braine, New York Daily News, 23 Mar. 2026 Pieces range from four-way stretch technical gym and yoga gear, to cotton knit blazers, cashmere sweaters, hybrid and performance footwear.—Samantha Conti, Footwear News, 16 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for cotton
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English coton, from Anglo-French cotun, from Old Italian cotone, from Arabic quṭun, quṭn
: a soft usually white fibrous substance composed of the hairs surrounding the seeds of various erect freely branching tropical plants (genus Gossypium) of the mallow family and used extensively in making threads, yarns, and fabrics (as in surgical dressings)