See also: coursés

English edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

courses

  1. plural of course

Noun edit

courses pl (plural only)

  1. (obsolete, euphemistic) Menses.
    • 1653, Nicholas Culpeper, The English Physician Enlarged, Folio, published 2007, page 201:
      Nep [catnip] is generally used for women to procure their courses, being taken inwardly or outwardly, either alone or with other convenient herbs in a decoction to bathe them, of sit over the hot fumes thereof.
    • 2008, Jack Staub, quoting Nicholas Culpeper, 75 Exceptional Herbs for Your Garden, Gibbs Smith, →ISBN, page 51:
      Nicholas Culpeper similarly reports in seventeenth century that “the garden chervil doth moderately warm the stomach . . . it is good to provoke urine, or expel the stone in the kidneys, to send down women's courses and to help the pleurisy and prickling of the sides.”

Verb edit

courses

  1. third-person singular simple present indicative of course

Anagrams edit

French edit

Verb edit

courses

  1. second-person singular present indicative/subjunctive of courser

Noun edit

courses f

  1. (plural only) shopping, usually for groceries, rarely for clothes.
    Je vais faire les courses, je reviens dans une heure. (see also faire les courses)
  2. plural of course

Anagrams edit

Middle English edit

Noun edit

courses

  1. plural of cours