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A Writer's Dictionary:

spring from somewhere Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with S » spouted ... spritz » spring from somewhere


spring
verb sprang (past tense), sprung, sprung (past participle), springing (present participle)
    intr
    1. To leap with a sudden quick launching action.
      Thesaurus: bounce, bound, hop, jump, leap, vault, dance.
    intr
    2. To move suddenly and swiftly, especially from a stationary position.
      Example: sprang into action
    3. To set off (a trap, etc) suddenly.
    4. To fit (eg a mattress) with springs.
    5. To present or reveal something suddenly and unexpectedly.
      Example: sprang the idea on me without warning
      Form: spring something on someone (also)
    6. slang
      To engineer the escape of (a prisoner) from jail.
    7. To jump over something.
      Example: sprang the fence
    intr
    8a. Said of wood or something wooden, eg a plank, mast, etc: to split, crack or become warped;
    8b. To split, crack or warp (wood or something wooden, eg a plank, mast, etc).
noun
    1a. A metal coil that can be stretched or compressed, and which will return to its original shape when the pull or pressure is released, especially one where this can be done at a controlled rate so that it can be used to turn a mechanism, eg in a clock, watch, etc;
    1b. A similar device that is designed to absorb shock waves, eg in the shock absorbers of some motor vehicles, or to make seats, beds, etc comfortable and bouncy.
    2. Any place where water emerges from underground and flows on to the Earth's surface or into a body of water such as a lake.
    3. The season between winter and summer, when most plants begin to grow, and usually thought of in the N hemisphere as consisting of the months from March to May inclusive, and in the S hemisphere as September to November. See also vernal.
      Form: Spring (also)
    1c. An early stage of something.
      Example: in the spring of her career
    4. A sudden vigorous leap.
    5a. The ability of a material to return rapidly to its original shape after a distorting force, such as stretching, bending or compression, has been removed
      Example: The elastic has lost its spring
      Thesaurus: bounce, elasticity, rebound, recoil, resilience.
    5b. A lively bouncing or jaunty quality.
      Example: a spring in his step
      Thesaurus: bounce, elasticity, buoyancy, resilience, vitality, zip.
Derivative: springless
adj
    Derivative: springlike
    adj
      Idiom: spring a leak
        Said of a boat, bucket, etc: to develop a hole so that water can flow in or out.
      Idiom: spring to mind
        To come into someone's thoughts immediately or suddenly.
          Example: His name doesn't spring to mind
      Etymology: Anglo-Saxon springan.

      Phrasal Verb: spring back
        To return quickly to the original position.
      Phrasal Verb: spring from somewhere
        To develop or originate from (a place, etc).
          Example: an idea that had sprung from one of his students
      Phrasal Verb: spring to something
        To come or rise to it, especially suddenly or quickly.
          Example: A beautiful smile sprang to her lips
      Phrasal Verb: spring up
        To appear or come into being suddenly.
          Example: New houses sprang up


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