peyote

noun
pey·​o·​te | \ pā-ˈō-tē How to pronounce peyote (audio) \
variants: or less commonly peyotl \ pā-​ˈō-​tᵊl How to pronounce peyotl (audio) \

Definition of peyote

1 : a hallucinogenic drug containing mescaline that is derived from the dried discoid tops of a cactus (Lophophora williamsii) and is used especially in the religious ceremonies of some American Indian peoples — see peyote button
2 : a small, low, spineless cactus (Lophophora williamsii) of the southwestern U.S. and Mexico with rounded stems having jointed tubercles with tufts of usually woolly hairs

called also mescal

Illustration of peyote

Illustration of peyote

peyote 2

Examples of peyote in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

In 1970, the Controlled Substances Act classified both substances as a Schedule 1 drug, along with heroin, peyote and ecstasy. John Maccormack, ExpressNews.com, "Hemp rush begins on West Texas farms," 29 June 2019 Ethyn Maki, an employee wearing a shirt printed with peyote cactuses, sidled up. Naomi Fry, The New Yorker, "What Is It with Millennials and Cactuses?," 24 June 2019 Unlike psilocybin mushrooms and peyote cactus, those plants are legal to buy and grow. Hailey Branson-potts, latimes.com, "How a trip on magic mushrooms helped decriminalize psychedelic plants in a California city," 22 June 2019 This past week Oakland followed suit, also decriminalizing magic mushrooms and peyote. Alexis Reliford, refinery29.com, "AOC Wants It To Be Easier To Study Magic Mushrooms & Other Psychedelics," 10 June 2019 That Scalia wrote the opinion in Smith, the case about Native American use of peyote, seems ironic. Christopher Shea, Vox, "Why Jeff Sessions thinks Christians are under siege in America," 1 Aug. 2018 After obtaining a search warrant for the home, deputies found six pots of peyote cactus and two jars of the drug, totaling 1,900 grams, along with the other drugs and plants. Dana Burke, Houston Chronicle, "Katy man allegedly caught growing peyote, marijuana in his home," 12 June 2018 Despite taking place in the same year as Huxley’s peyote trials, Michaux recounts his experience completely differently. Emily Heller, Vox, "Michael Pollan recommends 4 books that will change the way you think about your brain," 15 May 2018 The same thing that allows Indians, Native Americans, to use peyote. Recode Staff, Recode, "Full transcript: Author Michael Pollan on Recode Decode," 22 May 2018

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'peyote.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of peyote

1849, in the meaning defined at sense 1

History and Etymology for peyote

Mexican Spanish peyote, from Nahuatl peyotl peyote cactus

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More Definitions for peyote

peyote

noun
pey·​o·​te | \ pā-ˈōt-ē How to pronounce peyote (audio) \
variants: also peyotl \ -​ˈōt-​ᵊl How to pronounce peyotl (audio) \

Medical Definition of peyote

1 : a hallucinogenic drug containing mescaline that is derived from peyote buttons and used especially in the religious ceremonies of some American Indian peoples
2 : a small spineless cactus of the genus Lophophora (L. williamsii) of the southwestern United States and Mexico having rounded stems covered with jointed tubercules

called also mescal