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
Rake out and remove big piles of leaf litter and decaying vegetation near your house.—Arricca Elin Sansone, Southern Living, 23 Sep. 2025 Same breeder from two hours away, same birthday, same litter.—Rachael O'Connor, MSNBC Newsweek, 21 Sep. 2025
Verb
Early the next morning, out on Crotch Island, Ramos led Eglin and a few visitors down an old track littered with rusted machinery and piles of grout (the vulgate for waste rock) to an arena-size section of the quarry where the four men were already busy cutting stone.—Nick Paumgarten, New Yorker, 29 Sep. 2025 Are there crisp packets or orange peel littering the desk?—Katie Da Cunha Lewin
september 26, Literary Hub, 26 Sep. 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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