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    seed
    /siːd/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. sow (land) with seeds: "the shoreline is seeded with a special grass"
    • 2. (of a plant) produce or drop seeds: "mulches encourage many plants to seed freely"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of SEED is the grains or ripened ovules of plants used for sowing. How to use seed in a sentence. Do you cede or seed control?

  3. a small, round or oval object produced by a plant and from which, when it is planted, a new plant can grow: Sow the seeds (= put them in the ground) about three centimetres deep. The chemical will stop all seeds from sprouting (= starting to grow). The farmers grow these crops for seed (= for planting to grow more crops, rather than for eating).

  4. Seed definition: the fertilized, matured ovule of a flowering plant, containing an embryo or rudimentary plant.. See examples of SEED used in a sentence.

  5. noun Word forms: plural seeds or seed. 1. the part of a flowering plant that typically contains the embryo with its protective coat and stored food and that can develop into a new plant under the proper conditions; fertilized and mature ovule. 2. Loosely.

  6. A seed is basically a baby plant — it's the way plants reproduce. One tiny sunflower seed can potentially grow into a sunflower that's ten feet tall. Some seeds are just a tiny speck, others a small pod, and still others a cluster inside a fruit.

  7. a. A mature plant ovule containing an embryo. b. A small dry fruit, spore, or other propagative plant part. c. Seeds considered as a group: a farmer buying seed. d. The seed-bearing stage of a plant: The grass is in seed. 2. a. A larval shellfish or a hatchling fish: released scallop seed in the bay. b.

  8. SEED definition: 1. a small round or oval object produced by a plant that a new plant can grow from: 2. the…. Learn more.

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