Urine.
"The sailor adjusted the pee on the steelyard to measure the cargo's weight accurately."
The name of the Latin-script letter P .
Pence; penny (a quantity of money)
The bill of an anchor.
The sliding weight on a steelyard.
In plain English: Pee is another word for urine, which is the liquid your body gets rid of through urination.
"He felt uncomfortable when his bladder was full and he needed to go pee."
Usage: Pee is an informal noun referring to urine. Do not use it to describe a sliding weight on a steelyard, which is correctly called a poise or plummet.
eliminate urine
"Again, the cat had made on the expensive rug"
To urinate.
"After running three miles, I had to stop at the trailside outhouse just to pee."
In plain English: To pee means to urinate.
"The dog needs to go outside to pee."
Usage: Use "pee" informally in casual conversation to mean urinating, but avoid it in professional or formal settings where "urinate" or "use the restroom" is more appropriate. It functions strictly as a verb and should not be confused with the noun "pea.
Pee is simply a shortened form of the word piss that began appearing in English around the late 18th century. It serves as a polite euphemism for the more vulgar original term.