English edit

  A user suggests that this English entry be moved, merged or split.
Please see the discussion on Requests for moves, mergers and splits(+) for more information and remove this template after the request has been fulfilled.

Etymology edit

According to Michael Quinion of World Wide Words, "It has plausibly been suggested it came from the use of mixtures of cotton and other fibres in clothing. In the early 1800s, to cotton to somebody implied that you were drawn or attached to that person. It may be that the idea here is how well a thread of cotton sticks to the surface of cloth."

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Verb edit

cotton to (third-person singular simple present cottons to, present participle cottoning to, simple past and past participle cottoned to)

  1. (idiomatic) To like; approve of, accept, or tolerate.
    • 1858, Andrew Halliday, Frederick Lawrence, Kenilworth:
      Her heart's as hard as taxes, and as bad; / She does not even cotton to her dad.

See also edit

Further reading edit