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
The research team collected four specimens — three males and one female — from beneath a single rock resting on moist leaf litter near a seasonal stream inside Thailand’s Kaeng Krachan National Park.—Hanna Wickes, Charlotte Observer, 10 Mar. 2026 For a species that appears to occupy a narrow ecological niche — moist leaf litter in a transitional forest zone near seasonal streams — even small shifts in land cover at the park’s edges could squeeze its range.—Hanna Wickes, Kansas City Star, 10 Mar. 2026
Verb
Four other 18-year-olds, identified as Elijah Tate Owens, Aiden Hucks, Ana Katherine Luque and Ariana Cruz, were also arrested at the scene and charged with misdemeanor criminal trespass and littering on private property.—Julia Bonavita, FOXNews.com, 11 Mar. 2026 The former New York Jets first-round draft pick allegedly sent frantic messages to the chatbot shortly before Perpétuo was found dead on the floor of a home, covered in blood and littered with bottles of alcohol.—Steve Henson, Los Angeles Times, 10 Mar. 2026 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