sedge
Pronunciation
  • IPA: /sɛd͡ʒ/
Noun

sedge (plural sedges)

  1. Any plant of the genus Carex, the true sedge, perennial, endogenous herbs, often growing in dense tufts in marshy places. They have triangular jointless stems, a spiked inflorescence, and long grasslike leaves which are usually rough on the margins and midrib. There are several hundred species.
    • 1907, Robert William Chambers, chapter VIII, in The Younger Set, New York, N.Y.: D. Appleton & Company, OCLC 24962326 ↗:
      But when the moon rose and the breeze awakened, and the sedges stirred, and the cat's-paws raced across the moonlit ponds, and the far surf off Wonder Head intoned the hymn of the four winds, the trinity, earth and sky and water, became one thunderous symphony—a harmony of sound and colour silvered to a monochrome by the moon.
  2. Any plant of the family Cyperaceae.
  3. Certain other plants resembling sedges, such as Gentiana rubricaulis and Andropogon virginicus.
Translations Noun

sedge (plural sedges)

  1. (fishing) A dry fly used in fly fishing, designed to resemble a sedge or caddis fly.
Noun

sedge (plural sedges)

  1. Obsolete spelling of siege#English|siege
  2. Alternative spelling of segge
  3. A flock of herons, cranes, or bitterns.



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