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Synonyms

screed

American  
[skreed] / skrid /

noun

  1. a long discourse or essay, especially a diatribe.

  2. an informal letter, account, or other piece of writing.

  3. Building Trades.

    1. a strip of plaster or wood applied to a surface to be plastered to serve as a guide for making a true surface.

    2. a wooden strip serving as a guide for making a true level surface on a concrete pavement or the like.

    3. a board or metal strip dragged across a freshly poured concrete slab to give it its proper level.

  4. British Dialect. a fragment or shred, as of cloth.

  5. Scot.

    1. a tear or rip, especially in cloth.

    2. a drinking bout.


verb (used with or without object)

  1. Scot. to tear, rip, or shred, as cloth.

screed British  
/ skriːd /

noun

  1. a long or prolonged speech or piece of writing

  2. a strip of wood, plaster, or metal placed on a surface to act as a guide to the thickness of the cement or plaster coat to be applied

  3. a mixture of cement, sand, and water applied to a concrete slab, etc, to give a smooth surface finish

  4. a rent or tear or the sound produced by this

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Etymology

Origin of screed

1275–1325; Middle English screde torn fragment, irregular (with sc- for sh- ) representing Old English scrēade shred

Explanation

A screed is a long, boring speech or piece of writing with a bad attitude, like a rant. If you’ve had enough and you’re not going to take it anymore, go ahead and write an angry screed. You can also call a screed a "harangue" or a "tirade." Another totally separate meaning of the word is “a construction tool made of wood or plaster that acts as a guide for the thickness of new plaster.” Screed originally meant "strip of cloth," like the kind you might write a long list on in the old days. Still, if you’re speaking or writing a screed, it’s like you’re reading a long tedious list.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing screed

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Kino’s hypocrisy stems from the same swamp as the original’s fictitious Dr. Gröss, whose lurid footage climaxed with a tsk-tsking screed against poverty, pollution and fascism as major contributors to the global death toll.

From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 9, 2026

“The finance industry is a grift,” is the online headline the New York Times slapped on Oren Cass’s nearly 3,300-word-long screed.

From The Wall Street Journal • Feb. 18, 2026

While reviews were largely positive, The Quietus recoiled at the lack of heavy guitar anthems in a scathing screed that employed descriptors like "unintrusive", "clunking" and "by-numbers detritus".

From BBC • Oct. 10, 2025

The whole screed reads like a lament of enshittification, without using the term or even nodding to Cory Doctorow’s theories.

From Slate • Feb. 11, 2025

Following the gift of the Klassen book, Fischer sent the Collinses another hate-filled screed, Secret World Government, by Major General Count Cherep-Spiridovich.

From "Endgame" by Frank Brady

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