dog grass

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dog grass

A dog grass plant spreads across the edge of a garden path.

Definition

Noun 1. A type of grass: A European grass (Elymus repens, formerly Agropyron repens) known for spreading quickly through its creeping underground stems (rhizomes). It is considered an invasive weed in many areas, including North America.

Usage
  • This term is primarily used in botanical and agricultural contexts to identify a specific, often problematic, plant species.
  • It functions as a compound noun where "dog" is used attributively to modify "grass," indicating a specific kind. The meaning is not literal (it is not grass for dogs).
Examples
  • The farmer worked to eradicate the dog grass that was invading his wheat field.
  • Dog grass can be difficult to control because its rhizomes break apart easily.
  • This section of the lawn is mostly dog grass.
Advanced Usage
  • The term is a common name for the species . In more formal or scientific writing, the Latin binomial is preferred to avoid ambiguity.
  • It is also known by other common names, such as couch grass or quackgrass.
Variants and Related Words
  • Couch grass: A more common synonym for the same plant species, especially in British English.
  • Quackgrass: Another widely used common name in North America.
  • Rhizome: The creeping underground stem that characterizes how this grass spreads.
Synonyms
  • Couch grass
  • Quackgrass
  • Twitch grass
  • (scientific name)
Notes on Meaning
  • The "dog" in "dog grass" is pejorative, implying the plant is troublesome, common, or worthless, similar to its use in terms like "dog-tired." It does not relate to the animal.
  • Its primary meaning is as the name for a specific weed. It is not typically used in idioms or phrasal verbs.
dog grass

A dog grass plant spreads across the edge of a garden path.

Noun
  1. European grass spreading rapidly by creeping rhizomes; naturalized in North America as a weed