Word
Of
The
Day
cotton
cotton \KAH-tun\
verb
The verb
cotton is used with
on or
on to to mean “to begin to understand something; to catch on.”
Cotton used with
to alone means “to begin to like someone or something.”
// It took a while, but they are finally starting to
cotton on.
// She quickly
cottoned on to why her friend was nudging her, and stopped talking just before their teacher entered the room.
// We
cottoned to our new neighbors right away.
See the entry >
Examples:
“An insatiable reader, he enjoyed a wide range of literary acquaintances, some of whom—Rudyard Kipling, Owen Wister, and Joel Chandler Harris—became personal friends, and others, including Mark Twain (“a man wholly without cultivation”) ... he never quite
cottoned to.” — David S. Brown,
In the Arena: Theodore Roosevelt in War, Peace, and Revolution, 2025