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timothy

1
or tim·othy grass

[ tim-uh-thee ]

noun

, plural tim·o·thies.
  1. a coarse grass, Phleum pratense, having cylindrical spikes, used as fodder.


Timothy

2

[ tim-uh-thee ]

noun

  1. a disciple and companion of the apostle Paul, to whom Paul is supposed to have addressed two Epistles.
  2. either of these Epistles, I Timothy or II Timothy. : I Tim., II Tim.
  3. a male given name.

Timothy

/ ˈtɪməθɪ /

noun

  1. Timothy, SaintMJewishRELIGION: clergymanRELIGION: saint Saint. a disciple of Paul, who became leader of the Christian community at Ephesus. Feast day: Jan 26 or 22
  2. either of the two books addressed to him (in full The First and Second Epistles of Paul the Apostle to Timothy ), containing advice on pastoral matters


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Word History and Origins

Origin of timothy1

First recorded in 1730–40; named after Timothy Hanson, American farmer who cultivated it in the early 18th century

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Example Sentences

I was shocked to find out from Chief Timothy Longo that Canevari had given me the wrong information.

A uniformed cop, 25-year-old Police Officer Timothy Donohue, arrives.

The announcement names his parents, Wanda and Timothy, and hers, Katharine and Charles.

She was friendly with Timothy Leary, with whom allegedly she dropped acid.

Klocker says he was bitter and would compare himself to such persecuted gurus as Timothy Leary and Wilhelm Reich.

The Rev. Timothy soon let his pipe go out, and succumbed as his wife had done, for he had worked hard and eaten well.

Now, when I am called upon to produce a laugh from Timothy, I no longer make faces or "pop."

He looked hard at Timothy Maloney, and the clergyman looked hard at him.

He excluded hay fever by the lack of any reaction when timothy extract was dropped into the eye.

As he finds rag weed more toxic than the English timothy, his actual first dose is one-half of this theoretical dose.

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Timoshenkotimothy grass