HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of pipeweed | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B2
/ˈpaɪpwiːd/

Definitions

  1. Tobacco prepared for smoking in a pipe; also, the leaves of herbs or other plants prepared for such use.
    uncountable
  2. Any of a number of plants having thin and straight stems resembling pipes, often hollow or lacking branches.
    uncountable
  3. The common horsetail or field horsetail (Equisetum arvense).
    specifically, uncountable
  4. The desert trumpet (Eriogonum inflatum) which has a straight stem with a swollen portion; formerly some Native American tribes in the Las Vegas Valley area turned such stems into pipes for smoking by removing the stem at the base and cutting the swollen portion in half to serve as a bowl.
    US, specifically, uncountable
  5. The redrattle (Pedicularis flammea), a parasitic plant having hollow stems.
    obsolete, uncountable
  6. A type of seaweed with tubelike fronds; especially the sea lettuce (Ulva intestinalis).
    obsolete, uncountable
  7. An unidentified sessile marine invertebrate, probably a soft coral or sponge.
    obsolete, uncountable

Equivalents

Nederlands pijpkruid

Examples

“The ſtories told by one and another of theſe adventurers, had made a deep impreſſion on the mind of VValter Pipevveed, one of John [Bull]'s domeſtics, a fellovv of a roving and projecting diſpoſition, and vvho had learned the art of ſurveying.”
“He produced a small leather bag full of tobacco. 'We have heaps of it, […] It was Pippin who found two small barrels, washed up out of some cellar or store-house, I suppose. When we opened them, we found they were filled with this: as fine a pipe-weed as you could wish for, and quite unspoilt.'”
“I took the pipe and sniffed. Pipeweed had the aroma of the finest Moroccan Mauve. I inhaled. It was strong stuff.”
“Over the dimming fire, the old man tossed him a small box, carved with similar markings. Inside, Amarden found two pouches, one containing ordinary pipeweed. The other pouch was gray, ahd a silver string to draw it shut, and contained a fine silvery substance. […] "What is this?" / "Pipeweed, of course!" he said from between teeth clenching his pipe. / "It looks like silver dust."”
“Equisetaceæ rivalled "the mast of some great ammiral," in localities where they dwarfed representatives, the horse-tail and pipe-weed of our bogs, stand only a few inches high.”
“Fistulária […] Pipe-vveed; ſo called becauſe its ſtalk is hollovv.”
“U. diaphana. Transparent Ulva—Pipe-weed. Occasionally cast up on the beach at Seaton. Some authors call this substance, Alcyonium gelatinosum, and others Alcyonium diaphanum. It has much the appearance of an animal production.”
“The larva [of Gyrinus] is not well known, and not often met with by collectors. I have taken examples in the River Ant, not far from North Walsham. […] Both were found in pipe-weed (Entermorpha intestinalis), and it may be that this is the usual habitat.”
“Alcyonium, ſeu Fucus nodoſus & ſpongioſus. […] Sea ragged Staff, called by the Fiſhermen Pipe-vveed, or Pudding-vveed. This irregular-ſhaped yellovv ſizy Subſtance, […] is found adhering to moſt kinds of marine Subſtances, on the Coaſt of Kent, near the Iſland of Sheppey particularly; ſo that it frequently becomes troubleſome to the Fiſhermen, by often clogging their Nets. […] This Alcyonium deſerves a more critical Enquiry. It appears at preſent to me, to be the Spavvn of ſome numerous Species of Shell-fiſh.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.

See also

Learn this word in context

See pipeweed used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course