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sprout
[sprout]
verb (used without object)
to begin to grow; shoot forth, as a plant from a seed.
(of a seed or plant) to put forth buds or shoots.
to develop or grow quickly.
a boy awkwardly sprouting into manhood.
verb (used with object)
to cause to sprout.
to remove sprouts from.
Sprout and boil the potatoes.
noun
a shoot of a plant.
a new growth from a germinating seed, or from a rootstock, tuber, bud, or the like.
something resembling or suggesting a sprout, as in growth.
a young person; youth.
sprouts,
the young shoots of alfalfa, soybeans, etc., eaten as a raw vegetable.
sprout
/ spraʊt /
verb
(of a plant, seed, etc) to produce (new leaves, shoots, etc)
to begin to grow or develop
new office blocks are sprouting up all over the city
noun
a newly grown shoot or bud
something that grows like a sprout
See Brussels sprout
Other Word Forms
- nonsprouting adjective
- resprout verb
- undersprout verb (used without object)
- unsprouted adjective
- unsprouting adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of sprout1
Example Sentences
And from that pursuit, one of baseball’s most heated modern rivalries has sprouted.
My short, stubby toes curl into each other, sprouting from my fat foot.
As with the fires, fundraisers and mutual aid societies and neighborhood watch groups have sprouted.
“From here you go into the world of alfalfa sprouts.”
The complete kit includes cabbage, kale, Brussels sprouts, and radicchio, roasted sunflower seeds, toasted quinoa, dried bits of mango and a Thai-style sweet and spicy vinaigrette.
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