Plowed vs Prowed - What's the difference?
plowed | prowed |
(plow)
Turned over with the blade of a plow to create furrows (usually for planting crops).
(figuratively, rare) Well-trodden or well-researched, previously explored.
(US, informal) Drunk.
* 2005 , Anita Shreve, A Wedding in December , Little, Brown and Company (2005), ISBN 9780316024259,
* 2005 , Gary Stromberg & Jane Merrill, The Harder They Fall: Celebrities Tell Their Real Life Stories of Addiction and Recovery , Hazelden (2007), ISBN 9781592851560,
* 2013 , Nina Blackwood, Mark Goodman, Alan Hunter, & Martha Quinn (with Gavin Edwards), VJ: The Unplugged Adventures of MTV's First Wave , Atria Books (2013), ISBN 9781451678123,
*
As adjectives the difference between plowed and prowed
is that plowed is turned over with the blade of a plow to create furrows (usually for planting crops) while prowed is having a (specified kind of) prow.As a verb plowed
is past tense of plow.plowed
English
Alternative forms
* ploughedVerb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)unnumbered page:
- We all assumed he'd walked back to campus along the beach, singing off-key as he had a habit of doing when he was plowed .
page 72:
- Then I got a fifth of Bushmills and went back to the room and got plowed . That was my week of being "on the wagon."
page 202:
- I sat on a stool while everybody in the crew rotated around me, offering me shots of tequila. The only thing I had eaten all day was a doughnut, and I got totally plowed .