Fescues vs Fescued – What’s the difference?

Fescues vs Fescued - What's the difference?
As a noun fescues is .

As a verb fescued is (fescue).

fescues

English

Noun

(head)

  • fescued

    English

    Verb

    (head)

  • (fescue)

  • fescue

    English

    Noun

    (en noun )

  • A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out letters to children when learning to read.
  • * Milton
  • to come under the fescue of an imprimatur
  • * 1997 , (Thomas Pynchon),
  • ‘Now then,’ Mason rapping upon the Table’s Edge with a sinister-looking Fescue of Ebony, whose List of Uses simple Indication does not quite exhaust, whilst the Girls squirm pleasingly
  • A hardy grass commonly used to border golf fairways in temperate climates. Any member of the genus Festuca .
  • An instrument for playing on the harp; a plectrum.
  • (Chapman)
  • The style of a sundial.
  • Verb

    (fescu)

  • To use a fescue, or teach with a fescue.
  • (Milton)