Waste Definition

wāst
wasted, wastes, wasting
verb
wasted, wastes, wasting
To wear away; consume gradually; use up.
Webster's New World
To be used up or worn down gradually; become smaller or fewer by gradual loss.
Webster's New World
To make weak, feeble, or emaciated; wear away the strength, vigor, or life of.
A man wasted by age and disease.
Webster's New World
To destroy; devastate; ruin.
Webster's New World
To pass or be spent.
Webster's New World
Antonyms:
noun
wastes
Uncultivated or uninhabited land, as a desert or wilderness.
Webster's New World
A wasting or being wasted.
Webster's New World
A desolate, uncultivated, or devastated stretch, tract, or area.
Webster's New World
A vast expanse, as of the sea.
Webster's New World
Useless, superfluous, or discarded material, as ashes, garbage, or sewage.
Webster's New World
Antonyms:
adjective
Uncultivated or uninhabited; wild; barren; desolate.
Webster's New World
Left over, superfluous, refuse, or no longer of use.
A waste product.
Webster's New World
Excreted from the body as useless or superfluous material.
Webster's New World
Excreted from the body.
Waste matter.
American Heritage
Produced in excess of what is or can be used.
Waste energy.
Webster's New World
idiom
waste (one's) breath
  • To gain or accomplish nothing by speaking.
American Heritage
go to waste
  • to be or become wasted
Webster's New World
lay waste (to)
  • to destroy; devastate; make desolate
Webster's New World

Other Word Forms of Waste

Noun

Singular:
waste
Plural:
wastes

Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Waste

Origin of Waste

  • From Middle English wasten (“to waste, lay waste"), from Anglo-Norman, Old Northern French waster (“to waste, devastate") (cf. also the variant gaster and French gâter from a related Old French word); the Anglo-Norman form waster was either from Old Frankish *wuastan, *wuostan, *wuostjan (“to lay waste, devastate"), from Proto-Germanic *wōstijanÄ… (“to waste"), from Proto-Indo-European *wāsto- (“empty, wasted"), or alternatively from Latin vastāre, present active infinitive of vastō and influenced by the Frankish; the English word was assisted by similarity to native Middle English westen ("to waste"; > English weest). Cognate with Old High German wuostan, wuastan, wuostjan ("to waste"; > Modern German wüsten), Old English wÄ“stan (“to lay waste, ravage").

    From Wiktionary

  • From Middle English waste (noun, “a waste"), from Anglo-Norman, Old Northern French wast, waste (“a waste"), from Old Frankish *wuasti, *wuosti (“a waste") and *wōstin, *wōstinna (“a waste, wasteland, desert"), from Proto-Germanic *wōstÄ« (“a waste"), *wōstinjō (“a waste, wasteland"), from Proto-Indo-European *wāsto- (“empty, wasted"). Cognate with Old High German wuosti, wuasti ("a waste"; > Modern German Wüste), Old High German wuostinna (“a desert, waste"), Old English wÄ“sten (“a waste, wasteland"). Non Germanic cognates include Latin vastus (“waste, desert") and Albanian vjeshtë (“autumn").

    From Wiktionary

  • From Middle English waste (adjective, “waste"), from Anglo-Norman, Old Northern French wast (“waste"), from Old Frankish *wuasti, *wuosti (“waste, empty"), from Proto-Germanic *wōstijaz (“wasted, abandoned, empty"), from Proto-Indo-European *wāsto- (“empty, wasted"). Cognate with Old High German wuosti, wuasti (“waste, empty"), Old Saxon wōsti (“desolate"), Old English wÄ“ste (“waste, barren, desolate, empty").

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English wasten from Old North French waster from Latin vāstāre to make empty from vāstus empty euə- in Indo-European roots

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

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