Associations to the word «Pest»
Noun
- Tick
- Beet
- Importation
- Toxin
- Pear
- Agriculture
- Moth
- Trapping
- Organism
- Wheat
- Potato
- Feeding
- Ecology
- Hungary
- Orchard
- Foliage
- Forestry
- Susceptibility
- Fruit
- Chemical
- Fertilization
- Resistance
- Gall
- Usda
- Ea
- Manure
- Outbreak
- Stink
- Feeder
- Biotechnology
- Plague
- Tropic
- Forage
- Soil
- Extermination
- Yield
- Bait
- Specie
- Irrigation
- Strawberry
- Pollen
- Nutrient
- Spray
- Breeding
- Nectar
- Cultivation
- Turf
- Grain
- Mango
- Corn
- Microorganism
- Tolerance
- Cane
- Noctuidae
- Mating
- Dung
- Damage
- Feed
- Gardener
- Species
- Rot
- Gardening
- Vegetable
- Banana
- Melon
- Tomato
- Duce
- Plantation
- Monitoring
- Vineyard
- Rotation
- Leaf
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
PEST, noun. (originally) A plague, pestilence, epidemic
PEST, noun. An annoying, harmful, often destructive creature.
PEST, noun. An annoying person.
PEST, noun. (British) (slang) Someone with poor social discipline who continually bothers uninterested women.
PEST CONTROL, noun. Regulation or management of another species defined as a pest
Dictionary definition
PEST, noun. A serious (sometimes fatal) infection of rodents caused by Yersinia pestis and accidentally transmitted to humans by the bite of a flea that has bitten an infected animal.
PEST, noun. Any epidemic disease with a high death rate.
PEST, noun. A persistently annoying person.
PEST, noun. Any unwanted and destructive insect or other animal that attacks food or crops or livestock etc.; "he sprayed the garden to get rid of pests"; "many pests have developed resistance to the common pesticides".
Wise words
To use the same words is not a sufficient guarantee of
understanding; one must use the same words for the same
genus of inward experience; ultimately one must have one's
experiences in common.