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
Add sand, sawdust, cat litter, or gypsum to your ice melting formula to decrease the amount of salt product needed and reduce soil toxicity.—Barbara Gillette, The Spruce, 29 Dec. 2025 Most notable to us during testing was the HyperVelocity accelerated suction, which required only a single back-and-forth swipe to remove pet hair and cat litter from different carpets.—Quincy Bulin, Better Homes & Gardens, 27 Dec. 2025
Verb
Soon enough, the fielders were spread depressingly across the ground with men littering the boundary.—Tim Spiers, New York Times, 6 Jan. 2026 To say America’s landscape was littered in the 1970s is not merely poetic phrasing.—James Salzman, The Conversation, 5 Jan. 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
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