grow (gr )v. grew (gr ), grown (gr n), grow·ing, grows v.intr.1. To increase in size by a natural process. 2. a. To expand; gain: The business grew under new owners. b. To increase in amount or degree; intensify: The suspense grew. 3. To develop and reach maturity. 4. To be capable of growth; thrive: a plant that grows in shade. 5. To become attached by or as if by the process of growth: tree trunks that had grown together. 6. To come into existence from a source; spring up: love that grew from friendship. 7. To come to be by a gradual process or by degrees; become: grow angry; grow closer. v.tr.1. To cause to grow; raise: grow tulips. 2. To allow (something) to develop or increase by a natural process: grow a beard. 3. Usage Problem To cause to increase or expand by concerted effort: strategies that grew the family business. Phrasal Verbs: grow into1. To develop so as to become: A boy grows into a man. 2. To develop or change so as to fit: She grew into her job. He grew into the relationship slowly. grow on/upon1. To become gradually more evident to: A feeling of distrust grew on me. 2. To become gradually more pleasurable or acceptable to: a taste that grows on a person. grow up To become an adult. Idiom: grow out of To develop or come into existence from: an article that grew out of a few scribbled notes.
[Middle English growen, from Old English gr wan; see ghr - in Indo-European roots.]
grow er n. grow ing·ly adv. Usage Note: Grow has been used since medieval times as an intransitive verb, as in Our business has been growing steadily for 10 years. It has been used with an object since the 18th century, meaning "to produce or cultivate," as in We grow corn in our garden. But the transitive use applied to business and nonliving things is quite new. It came into full bloom during the 1992 presidential election, when nearly all the candidates were concerned with "growing the economy." The Usage Panel is decidedly less fond of this development than business leaders and politicans are. Eighty percent of the Panel rejects the phrase grow our business. The Panel is more accepting of, though not enthusiastic about, the phrase grow our way, perhaps because of way's established use in expressions like make our way and find our way: 48 percent accept We've got to grow our way out of this recession. The Panel has no affection for the odd but occasionally heard phrase grow down: 98 percent reject If elected, I shall do my utmost to grow down the deficit. |
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | growing - (biology) the process of an individual organism growing organically; a purely biological unfolding of events involved in an organism changing gradually from a simple to a more complex level; "he proposed an indicator of osseous development in children"culture - (biology) the growing of microorganisms in a nutrient medium (such as gelatin or agar); "the culture of cells in a Petri dish" amelogenesis - the developmental process of forming tooth enamel apposition - (biology) growth in the thickness of a cell wall by the deposit of successive layers of material auxesis - growth from increase in cell size without cell division cohesion - (botany) the process in some plants of parts growing together that are usually separate (such as petals) cultivation - the process of fostering the growth of something; "the cultivation of bees for honey" gametogenesis - the development and maturation of sex cells through meiosis gastrulation - the process in which a gastrula develops from a blastula by the inward migration of cells habit - the general form or mode of growth (especially of a plant or crystal); "a shrub of spreading habit" intussusception - (biology) growth in the surface area of a cell by the deposit of new particles between existing particles in the cell wall life cycle - the course of developmental changes in an organism from fertilized zygote to maturity when another zygote can be produced morphogenesis - differentiation and growth of the structure of an organism (or a part of an organism) palingenesis, recapitulation - emergence during embryonic development of various characters or structures that appeared during the evolutionary history of the strain or species psychogenesis - a general term for the origin and development of almost any aspect of the mind psychogenesis - the development in the life of an individual of some disorder that is caused by psychological rather than physiological factors psychosexual development - (psychoanalysis) the process during which personality and sexual behavior mature through a series of stages: first oral stage and then anal stage and then phallic stage and then latency stage and finally genital stage rooting - the process of putting forth roots and beginning to grow suppression - the failure to develop some part or organ isometry - the growth rates in different parts of a growing organism are the same | | 2. | growing - (electronics) the production of (semiconductor) crystals by slow crystallization from the molten stateproduction - the act or process of producing something; "Shakespeare's production of poetry was enormous"; "the production of white blood cells" electronics - the branch of physics that deals with the emission and effects of electrons and with the use of electronic devices epitaxy - growing a crystal layer of one mineral on the crystal base of another mineral in such a manner that its crystalline orientation is the same as that of the substrate | | Adj. | 1. | growing - relating to or suitable for growth; "the growing season for corn"; "good growing weather" |
Translations growing [ˈgrəʊɪŋ]A. ADJ1. (= developing) 1.1. ( Bot, Agr) [ crop, plant] → que está creciendo
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