Plants


[plant, plahnt] /plænt, plɑnt/

noun
1.
any member of the kingdom Plantae, comprising multicellular organisms that typically produce their own food from inorganic matter by the process of photosynthesis and that have more or less rigid cell walls containing cellulose, including vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, and hornworts: some classification schemes may include fungi, algae, bacteria, blue-green algae, and certain single-celled eukaryotes that have plantlike qualities, as rigid cell walls or photosynthesis.
2.
an herb or other small vegetable growth, in contrast with a tree or a shrub.
3.
a seedling or a growing slip, especially one ready for transplanting.
4.
the equipment, including the fixtures, machinery, tools, etc., and often the buildings, necessary to carry on any industrial business:
a manufacturing plant.
5.
the complete equipment or apparatus for a particular mechanical process or operation:
the heating plant for a home.
6.
the buildings, equipment, etc., of an institution:
the sprawling plant of the university.
7.
Slang. something intended to trap, decoy, or lure, as criminals.
8.
Slang. a scheme to trap, trick, swindle, or defraud.
9.
a person, placed in an audience, whose rehearsed or prepared reactions, comments, etc., appear spontaneous to the rest of the audience.
10.
a person placed secretly in a group or organization, as by a foreign government, to obtain internal or secret information, stir up discontent, etc.
11.
Theater. a line of dialogue, or a character, action, etc., introducing an idea or theme that will be further developed at a later point in the play:
Afterward we remembered the suicide plant in the second act.
verb (used with object)
12.
to put or set in the ground for growth, as seeds, young trees, etc.
13.
to furnish or stock (land) with plants:
to plant a section with corn.
14.
to establish or (ideas, principles, doctrines, etc.):
to plant a love for learning in growing children.
15.
to introduce (a breed of animals) into a country.
16.
to deposit (young fish, or spawn) in a river, lake, etc.
17.
to bed (oysters).
18.
to insert or set firmly in or on the ground or some other body or surface:
to plant posts along a road.
19.
Theater. to insert or place (an idea, person, or thing) in a play.
20.
to place; put.
21.
to place with great force, firmness, or determination:
He planted himself in the doorway as if daring us to try to enter. He planted a big kiss on his son’s cheek.
22.
to station; post:
to plant a police officer on every corner.
23.
to locate; situate:
Branch stores are planted all over.
24.
to establish (a colony, city, etc.); found.
25.
to settle (persons), as in a colony.
26.
to say or place (something) in order to obtain a desired result, especially one that will seem spontaneous:
The police planted the story in the newspaper in order to trap the thief.
27.
Carpentry. to nail, glue, or otherwise attach (a molding or the like) to a surface.
28.
to place (a person) secretly in a group to function as a spy or to promote discord.
29.
Slang. to hide or conceal, as stolen goods.
/plɑːnt/
noun
1.
any living organism that typically synthesizes its food from inorganic substances, possesses cellulose cell walls, responds slowly and often permanently to a stimulus, lacks specialized sense organs and nervous system, and has no powers of locomotion
2.
such an organism that is green, terrestrial, and smaller than a shrub or tree; a herb
3.
a cutting, seedling, or similar structure, esp when ready for transplantation
4.
(informal) a thing positioned secretly for discovery by another, esp in order to incriminate an innocent person
5.
(billiards, snooker) a position in which the cue ball can be made to strike an intermediate which then pockets another ball
verb (transitive)
6.
(often foll by out) to set (seeds, crops, etc) into (ground) to grow
7.
to place firmly in position
8.
to establish; found
9.
to implant in the mind
10.
(slang) to deliver (a blow)
11.
(informal) to position or hide, esp in order to deceive or observe
12.
to place (young fish, oysters, spawn, etc) in (a lake, river, etc) in order to stock the water
/plɑːnt/
noun
1.

2.
a factory or workshop
3.
mobile mechanical equipment for construction, road-making, etc
n.

Old English plante “young tree or shrub, herb newly planted,” from Latin planta “sprout, shoot, cutting” (source of Spanish planta, French plante), perhaps from *plantare “to drive in with the feet, push into the ground with the feet,” from planta “sole of the foot,” from nasalized form of PIE *plat- “to spread, flat” (see place (n.)).

Broader sense of “any vegetable life, vegetation generally” is first recorded 1550s. Most extended usages are from the verb, on the notion of “something planted;” e.g. “construction for an industrial process,” 1789, at first with reference to the set-up of machinery, later also the building; also slang meaning “a spy” (1812). Many of these follow similar developments in the French form of the word. German Pflanz, Irish cland, Welsh plant are from Latin.
v.

“put in the ground to grow,” Old English plantian, from Latin plantare (see plant (n.)). Reinforced by cognate Old French planter. Without reference to growing, “to insert firmly,” late 14c. Of colonies from c.1300. Figuratively, of ideas, etc., from early 15c. Meaning “to bury” is U.S. slang from U.S., 1855. Related: Planted; planting.
plant
(plānt)
Any of a wide variety of multicellular eukaryotic organisms, belonging to the kingdom Plantae and including the bryophytes and vascular plants. Plant cells have cell walls made of cellulose. Except for a few specialized symbionts, plants have chlorophyll and manufacture their own food through photosynthesis. Most plants grow in a fixed location and reproduce sexually, showing an alternation of generations between a diploid stage (with each cell having two sets of chromosomes) and haploid stage (with each cell having one set of chromosomes) in their life cycle. The first fossil plants date from the Silurian period. Formerly the algae, slime molds, dinoflagellates, and fungi, among other groups, were classified as plants, but now these are considered to belong to other kingdoms. See Table at taxonomy.

noun

verb

[“The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants”, Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz, Aristid Lindenmayer. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1990. 3-54097297-8].

Read Also:

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    [plants-muh n, plahnts-] /ˈplænts mən, ˈplɑnts-/ noun, plural plantsmen. 1. a nurseryman. 2. a horticulturist. 3. a person with a keen interest in and wide knowledge of plants and their cultivation. /ˈplɑːntsmən/ noun (pl) -men, -women 1. an experienced gardener who specializes in collecting rare or interesting plants

  • Plantswoman

    [plants-woo m-uh n, plahnts-] /ˈplæntsˌwʊm ən, ˈplɑnts-/ noun, plural plantswomen. 1. a nurserywoman. 2. a horticulturist. 3. a woman with a keen interest in and wide knowledge of and their cultivation.

  • Planula

    [plan-yuh-luh] /ˈplæn yə lə/ noun, plural planulae [plan-yuh-lee] /ˈplæn yəˌli/ (Show IPA). Zoology. 1. the ciliate, free-swimming larva of a coelenterate. /ˈplænjʊlə/ noun (pl) -lae (-ˌliː) 1. the ciliated free-swimming larva of hydrozoan coelenterates such as the hydra planula (plān’yə-lə) Plural planulae (plān’yə-lē’) The flat, free-swimming, ciliated larva of a cnidarian.

  • Planigraph

    [pley-ni-graf, -grahf, plan-i-] /ˈpleɪ nɪˌgræf, -ˌgrɑf, ˈplæn ɪ-/ noun, Medicine/Medical. 1. an x-ray photograph in which a given plane of the body is well defined and those above and below it purposely out of focus.

  • Planifying

    [plan-uh-fahy] /ˈplæn əˌfaɪ/ verb (used with or without object), planified, planifying. Informal. 1. to plan in great detail.


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