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A Writer's Dictionary:

run to seed Definition


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seed
noun seeds, seed
    1. bot.
      In flowering and cone-bearing plants: the highly resistant structure that develops from the ovule after fertilization, and is capable of developing into a new plant.
    2. A small hard fruit or part in a fruit; a pip.
    3. A source or origin.
      Example: the seeds of the plan
      Thesaurus: source, origin, root, basis, foundation.
    4. literary
      Offspring; descendants.
    5. literary
      Semen.
    6. sport.
      A seeded player.
      Example: He is number one seed
    7. chem.
      A single crystal introduced to a concentrated solution to induce crystallization.
verb seeded, seeding
    intr
    1. Said of a plant: to produce seeds.
    2. To sow or plant (seeds).
    3. To remove seeds from (eg a fruit).
    4. chem.
      To use a single crystal to induce the formation of more crystals from (a concentrated solution).
    5. To scatter particles of some substance into (a cloud) in order to induce rainfall, disperse a storm or freezing fog, etc.
    6. sport.
      To rank (a player in a tournament) according to their likelihood of winning.
      Example: has been seeded number three for Wimbledon
    7. sport.
      To arrange (a tournament) so that high-ranking players only meet each other in the later stages of the contest.
Derivative: seeded
    Having the seeds removed.
    Bearing or having seeds.
    Sown.
    Said of a tournament player: who has been seeded.
Derivative: seedless
adj
    Idiom: go to seed (run to seed)
      Said of a plant: to stop flowering prior to the development of seed.
      colloq
      To allow oneself to become unkempt or unhealthy through lack of care.
    Idiom: sow the seeds of something
      To initiate it.
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon sæd.



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