especially: a widely cultivated cereal grass (A. sativa)
b
: a crop or plot of the oat
also: the seed of an oat —usually used in plural but singular or plural in construction
2
archaic: a reed instrument made of an oat straw
Illustration of oat
oat 1a
Phrases
feel one's oats
: to act in a newly self-confident and often self-important manner
Examples of oat in a Sentence
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The plastic eggs are filled with fun treats that are dog-friendly, including heart beets, peanut butter, bacon cheese, double cheeseburger, and cranberry oats.—Nora Colomer, FOXNews.com, 16 Apr. 2025 All grains, like quinoa and oats, are packed with fiber, which is needed for blood sugar control, digestion, and heart health.7
Legumes, like beans and lentils, also contain fiber and are rich in plant protein.—Chelsea Rae Bourgeois, Rdn, Ld, Health, 31 Mar. 2025 Look for phrases like whole grain wheat, whole grain oats, whole grain corn and whole grain brown rice on the ingredients list.—Caroline Hopkins Legaspi, New York Times, 8 Apr. 2025 Some prebiotic-rich food options include berries, asparagus, apples, garlic, onions, leeks, dandelion greens, chicory root, whole oats, and green bananas.—Beth Krietsch, SELF, 7 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for oat
Word History
Etymology
Middle English ote "the grain of the oat plant, the plant itself," going back to Old English āte (weak feminine noun), of uncertain origin
Note:
Old English āte has been compared with regional Dutch aate, oote "wild oats" (West and Zeeland Flanders), West Frisian and Groningen Dutch oat. (These contrast with Dutch haver, denoting cultivated oats, a reflex of the Common Germanic word for the grain.) Michiel de Vaan, in an addenda to the online etymologiebank.nl, believes that the Flanders words are semantic extensions of regional aat "food," of general Germanic origin (see eat entry 2), though this hypothesis would scarcely explain the Old English word. Jan de Vries (Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek, Brill, 1971) hypothesizes that the Low Country words may have been borrowed from English.
First Known Use
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
Time Traveler
The first known use of oat was
before the 12th century
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