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单词 plant
释义

plantn.1

Brit. /plɑːnt/, /plant/, U.S. /plænt/
Forms: Old English planta (rare), Old English (Northumbrian)–Middle English plonte, Old English–1600s plante, Old English (rare)– plant, Middle English planet (perhaps transmission error), Middle English planete (perhaps transmission error), Middle English plantte, Middle English plaunte, Middle English plawnt, Middle English playnt (perhaps transmission error), Middle English plonttez (plural), Middle English–1500s plaunt, 1900s– plent (Irish English (northern)); Scottish pre-1700 plaint, pre-1700 plaunt, pre-1700 playnt, pre-1700 1700s– plant, 1900s– plent. N.E.D. (1907) also records a form late Middle English plounte.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: Latin planta ; French plante ; plant v.
Etymology: In Old English < classical Latin planta (see below); subsequently (in branch I.) reinforced by Anglo-Norman plante, plaunte plant (second half of the 13th cent. or earlier), young shoot (c1292 or earlier), young tree (early 14th cent. or earlier) and Middle French plante, plaunte, plente (French plante ) plant (1342 or earlier; 1377 or earlier in figurative use (compare sense 1b), though apparently not used with reference to people until 1685), young shoot, seedling (1467, now obsolete in this sense) < classical Latin planta young plant, seedling, slip, cutting, graft, in post-classical Latin also plant in general (13th cent.), probably < plantāre plant v.; compare Middle French plant young shoot (1407), plants collectively (1495; < planter plant v.). Compare Old Occitan, Occitan planta (1149 in sense 1, second half of the 13th cent. in sense 2), Catalan planta (late 13th cent. in sense 2), Spanish llanta (c1250 in sense 1, c1275 in sense 2), planta (a1250 in sense 2), Portuguese planta (14th cent. in sense 2), Italian pianta (beginning of the 14th cent. in sense 2; earlier as †planti (plural; 13th cent. in sense 2)). In branch II. < plant v. (compare especially 4).The Latin word was also borrowed into other Germanic languages; compare Middle Dutch plante (Dutch plant ), Middle Low German plant , plante , Old High German pflanza , flanza (Middle High German phlanze , German Pflanze ), Old Icelandic planta , Old Danish planta (Danish plante ), Old Swedish, Swedish planta . Also attested early as a surname:1301 in R. Stewart-Brown Cheshire in Pipe Rolls (1938) 205 Ricardo Plant. In spite of the apparent implications of quot. 1789 at sense 5a does not appear to have a model in French; however, perhaps compare French plan plan n. With plant cot n. at Compounds 5 compare earlier plantiecrue n. With plant geography n. at Compounds 5 compare German Pflanzengeographie (1823 or earlier), Danish plantegeografi (1852 or earlier; 1822 as †plantegeographie ). In plant of gluttony n. at Compounds 5 after Gaelic lus-a'-chraois. In plant pathologist n. at Compounds 5 after German Pflanzenpathologe (1889 in the passage translated in quot. 1894 for plant pathologist n. at Compounds 5). With plant pathology n. at Compounds 5 compare German Pflanzenpathologie (1807 or earlier). With plant physiology n. at Compounds 5 compare German Pflanzenphysiologie (1798 or earlier). With plant-plot n. at Compounds 5 compare classical Latin plantārium (in post-classical Latin also in figurative use; see plantarium n.).
I. Senses relating to the living organism.
1.
a. A young tree, shrub, vegetable, or flower newly planted, or intended for planting; a set, a cutting, a seedling. Now chiefly English regional (midlands and southern) and Irish English (northern): a young cabbage plant.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > wild and cultivated plants > [noun] > cultivated or planted
planteOE
pet1842
cultivar1923
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > management of plants > propagation of plants > [noun] > by cuttings > cutting or slip
planteOE
plantingeOE
quickwoodc1383
graffa1393
sarmenta1398
slivingc1400
springc1400
clavec1420
sleavingc1440
talionc1440
quick1456
quicking1469
graft1483
quickset1484
slip1495
setlingc1503
set1513
pitchset1519
slaving?1523
truncheon1572
stallon1587
crosset1600
marquot1600
sliver1604
secta1616
offset1629
slipping1638
side-slip1651
slift1657
cutting1691
pitcher1707
mallet-shoot1745
root cutting1784
stowing1788
stool1789
pitch1808
heel1822
cutling1834
piping1851
cutback1897
stump plant1953
eOE (Mercian) Vespasian Psalter (1965) cxliii. 14 (12) Quorum filii sicut nouella plantationis stabilita a iuuentute sua : ðeara bearn swe swe niowe plant steaðelunge gesteaðulfestad from guguðe his.
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xlix. 381 Sio halige gesomnung Godes folces..eardað on æppeltunum, ðonne hie wel begað hira plantan & hiera impan, oð hie fulweaxne beoð.
c1395 G. Chaucer Wife of Bath's Tale 763 Yif me a plante of thilke blessed tree, And in my gardyn planted shal it be.
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 32 Men bryngen of þe plauntes [?a1425 Egerton plantes or slyfynges; Fr. plaunceons] for to planten in oþer contrees.
c1450 Alphabet of Tales (1904) I. 1 (MED) Þou sett in my garthyn a yong plante of a tre.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Matt. xv. f. xxjv All plantes [Gk. πᾶσα ϕυτεία, L. omnis plantatio] which my hevenly father hath nott planted, shalbe plucked vppe by the rotes.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms xlvii. 2 The hill of Sion is like a fayre plante [cf. Psalm 48:3 in M. Luther(1534): Der berg Zion ist wie ein schön zweigelin].
1574 J. Baret Aluearie P 425 A plant: the slippe of a tree that was planted in the earth.
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) iii. ii. 349 There is a man haunts the Forrest, that abuses our yong plants with caruing Rosalinde on their barkes. View more context for this quotation
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 86/2 Plants are young Trees fit to be set.
1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 215 Some Plants of Canes.
1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) How be you off vor plants? mine didn come up 'tall; but I've a-got a plenty o' curly greens and that, and I wants to changy way zomebody vor zome plants, vor zome o' they.
1903 Eng. Dial. Dict. IV. 538/1 Were I asked by a neighbour ‘Can you spare me a few plants?’ I should not ask what plants, but answer at once as to cabbages.
1953 M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal 214/1 Plant,..a young cabbage plant fit for planting out.
b. figurative. A thing planted or springing up; a young person; a novice. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > source or principle of life > age > youth > [noun] > a young one
youngOE
planta1393
frotha1420
immature1866
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) ii. 2370 (MED) Yit wolden thei a man supplaunte And take a part of thilke plaunte Which he hath for himselve set.
c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. i. 137 (MED) Loue is þe leuest þing þat oure lord askiþ, And ek þe plante [v.rr. plaunte, plonte, plente; playnt] of pes.
R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Fire of Love 5 (MED) Fyer of fraward lufe..wastis burionyng of vertu, & norrysches þe plantes of all vyce.
a1513 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 81 Gret Gode ws graunt that we haue lang desirit, A plaunt to spring of thi successioun.
a1525 Contempl. Synnaris l. 1051, in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 223 O Blissit lady..þou plant of paradyss.
1598 R. Grenewey tr. Tacitus Annales xiii. iii. 182 A true and woorthie plant to receiue his fathers Empire, which a graffed sun by adoption now possessed.
1648 T. Gage Eng.-Amer. 175 The Inquisition..considering them to be but new plants useth not such rigour with them.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Plant, figuratively a young Man or Maid.
1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 714 Learning grew Beneath his care, a thriving vig'rous plant.
1812 Sporting Mag. 39 188 A plant from Bristol, a youth of tremendous power.
c. A young tree or sapling used as a pole, staff, or cudgel. Irish English (northern) in later use. Now rare except in ash-plant n.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > club or stick > [noun]
sowelc893
treec893
cudgelc897
stinga900
bat?c1225
sticka1275
clubc1275
truncheon14..
bourdonc1325
bastona1400
warderera1400
plantc1400
kibble1411
playloomc1440
hurlbatc1450
ploykc1450
rung1491
libberlac1500
waster1533
batonc1550
macana1555
libbet1562
bastinado1574
crab-tree comb1593
tomahawkc1612
billeta1616
wiper1622
batoon1637
gibbeta1640
crab-bat1647
kibbo1688
Indian club1694
batterdasher1696
crab-stick1703
bloodwipea1705
bludgeon1730
kierie1731
oaken towel1739
crab1740
shillelagh1772
knobstick1783
pogamogganc1788
whirlbat1791
nulla-nulla1798
waddy1800
kevel1807
supple1815
mere1820
hurlet1825
knobkerrie1826
blackthorn1829
bastera1833
twig1842
leangle1845
alpeen1847
banger1849
billy1856
thwack-stave1857
clump1868
cosh1869
nulla1878
sap1899
waddy1899
blunt instrument1923
society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > types of tools generally > [noun] > in form of bar, pole, rod, etc.
stingc725
stakec893
sowelc900
tree971
rungOE
shaftc1000
staffc1000
stockc1000
poleOE
spritOE
luga1250
lever1297
stanga1300
perchc1300
raftc1330
sheltbeam1336
stower1371
palea1382
spar1388
spire1392
perk1396
ragged staff1397
peela1400
slot1399
plantc1400
heck-stower1401
sparkin1408
cammockc1425
sallow stakec1440
spoke1467
perk treec1480
yard1480
bode1483
spit1485
bolm1513
gada1535
ruttock1542
stob1550
blade1558
wattle1570
bamboo1598
loggat1600
barling1611
sparret1632
picket1687
tringle1706
sprund1736
lug-pole1773
polting lug1789
baton1801
stuckin1809
rack-pin1821
picket-pin1844
I-iron1874
pricker1875
stag1881
podger1888
window pole1888
verge1897
sallow pole1898
lat1899
swizzle-stick1962
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xvi. 50 Þanne liberum arbitrium laccheth þe thridde plante.
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 493 (MED) He caught a plante of an appell tre..and toke the barre in bothe handes, and seide he wolde make hem to remeve.
a1640 J. Day & H. Chettle Blind-beggar (1659) sig. I4v An ashen Plant, a good Cudgell, what sho'd I ca it?
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 115 Take, Shepherd take, a plant of stubborn Oak; And labour him with many a sturdy stroak. View more context for this quotation
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 335. ¶2 Sir Roger's Servants..had..provided themselves with good Oaken Plants, to attend their Master upon this occasion.
1732 E. Haywood tr. M.-A. de Gomez Belle Assemblée II. 121 This magnanimous Spaniard..having under his Habit, a good Sword, and a strong Oaken-Plant.
1900 A. McIlroy By Lone Craig-linnie Burn v. 54 (Ulster) The country people came pouring in—each man carrying his ash ‘plant’.
2.
a. gen. and Biology. A living organism other than an animal, able to subsist wholly on inorganic substances, typically fixed to a substrate and moving chiefly by means of growth, and lacking specialized sensory and digestive organs; spec. (more fully green plant) such an organism belonging to a group (the kingdom Plantae) which comprises multicellular forms having cellulose cell walls and capable of photosynthesis by means of chlorophyll, including trees, shrubs, herbs, grasses, and ferns (the vascular or higher plants), and also mosses and liverworts (the bryophytes). Frequently spec.: a small (esp. herbaceous) organism of this kind, as distinguished from a tree or shrub; (in informal use) such an organism grown for or known by its foliage or fruit, as distinguished from a ‘flower’.Bacteria, formerly classified in the kingdom Plantae, have now been removed to a separate kingdom, and would generally not be referred to as plants. However, in the broadest (non-technical) sense, the term still may include fungi (and lichens), which are now classified in a separate kingdom, but were formerly regarded as lower (non-vascular) plants, together with algae and bryophytes. The position of algae is also equivocal: many scientific writers exclude them from the kingdom Plantae (placing them in the kingdom Protista or Protoctista), but green algae are still sometimes treated as lower plants, and non-technical use of the word ‘plant’ would often include multicellular algae (e.g. seaweeds).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > [noun]
thingc1300
vegetablec1484
plantisouna1500
plantouna1500
vegetabilitya1500
vegetativea1500
plant1551
fellow creature1572
vegetal1591
morea1599
vegetive1602
vegetant1605
vegetationa1641
c1395 G. Chaucer Franklin's Tale 1032 Apollo, god and gouernour Of euery plaunte [v.r. planete], herbe, tree, and flour.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 208 In trees and in plauntes is lif and vertu of lif right as in bestes but dyuersliche; ffor in plauntes lyf is y-hud, and in bestes openliche y-knowe and complete.
a1425 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Christ Church Oxf.) Jonah iv. 7 Jonas gladede on þe yuy..& god made redi a werm..& smot þe yuy plaunte, & it driede vp.
c1440 S. Scrope tr. C. de Pisan Epist. of Othea (St. John's Cambr.) (1970) 33 Bachus was the man that first planted vynes in Grece;..thei seide that Bachus was a god, the which had youen such strengthe to his plante [v.rr. planet, plants].
1551 W. Turner New Herball sig. A ij Ye Knowlege of plantes, herbes, and trees.
1567 J. Maplet Greene Forest f. 26v Plants be sorted and deuided into three parts: the first is the Herbe: the seconde the Shrub: the third the Tree.
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §608 Generation by Copulation (certainly) extendeth not to Plants.
1696 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Plant, a Natural Body that has a vegetable Soul.
1706 J. Evelyn Sylva (ed. 4) 353 So astonishing and wonderful is the organism, parts and functions of plants and trees.
a1771 T. Gray Ess. I in W. Mason Mem. Life & Writings (1775) 193 Sickly Plants betray a niggard earth.
1776 W. Withering Brit. Plants (1796) II. 180 Betula. Flowers male and female on the same plant.
1830 J. G. Strutt Sylva Brit. (rev. ed.) 36 The original dimensions of this venerable plant.
1869 M. Foster in Nature 11 Nov. 53/2 Plants unburn what the animal burns; and so the heat of the sun brings back oxygen to the world.
1875 Encycl. Brit. III. 691/1 There are other degraded allies of green plants, which are content to work up again the imperfectly broken down products of decay. Such plants are termed Saprophytes.
1892 J. Tait Mind in Matter (ed. 3) 81 Plants, because it is their nature to produce leaves, may, by an overplus of food, produce nothing else.
1915 M. Armstrong & J. J. Thornber Field Bk. Western Wild Flowers 2 An attractive..plant, with stout, smooth, hollow flower-stems.
1946 A. Nelson Princ. Agric. Bot. xxii. 453 Prickly pear..was introduced into Australia as an ornamental garden plant and escaped into the wild.
1966 F. H. Brightman Oxf. Bk. Flowerless Plants Introd. p. vii There are no English names for the majority of the plants described here; most people are have been content to speak generally of, say, lichens, seaweeds, or mosses.
1984 S. Johnson Tunnel iii. 23 In front of the house was a garden full of plants and flowers.
2002 Horticulture Nov. 52 Slipper orchids are still some of the most intriguing indoor plants you can grow.
b. figurative and in extended use.
ΚΠ
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 46a Þe teeþ ben a maner of plauntis I-steked & I-piȝt by rootes & mores in þe bones of þe chekes & of þe chynne.
1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III iv. iv. 325 The parents liue, whose children thou hast butcherd, Olde withered plantes, to waile it with their age. View more context for this quotation
1648 S. Danforth Almanack 2 Behold a choyce, a rare and pleasant plant, Which nothing but it's parallell doth want.
1844 R. W. Emerson Young Amer. 14 Government has been a fossil; it should be a plant.
1869 W. E. H. Lecky Hist. European Morals II. i. 41 Christianity alone was powerful enough to tear this evil plant from the Roman soil.
1926 J. Galsworthy Silver Spoon vi. 41 Well, sir, the Press is a sensitive plant. I'm afraid you might make it curl up.
1974 M. Ayrton Midas Consequence v. 121 All good material for farce but not conducive to the flowering of my genius in the tranquil atmosphere I need to nurture that sturdy but vulnerable plant.
1984 T. C. Boyle Budding Prospects (1985) iv. iv. 282 If Gesh was tangled up in himself, rootbound with frustration, Phil was the sensitive plant.
c. The leafy part of a green plant, as distinguished from the stem. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > wild and cultivated plants > food plant or vegetable > [noun] > part of
plant1693
1693 J. Evelyn tr. J. de La Quintinie Compl. Gard'ner ii. vi. ii. 144 Leeks..Replanted in the Month of May, very deep in the Earth, to make their Stalks and Plants thick and white.
3.
a. A growth of something planted or sown; a crop. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > cultivation of plants or crops > crop or crops > [noun]
wastumc888
tiltha1100
estrea1300
madder-cropc1300
gainage1390
cropa1400
yieldingc1405
emblement1495
burden?1523
increase1535
field-ware1546
gather1555
esplees1598
husbandrya1616
glebe1660
warea1661
récolte1669
tilling1680
tillage1681
stuffa1687
growing1722
bearing1747
raccolta1748
the crops1789
plant1832
raising1857
cropping1861
1832 E. Lankester Veg. Substances Food 199 To insure a good crop of barley and a kind plant of clover.
1846 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 7 ii. 288 The promising plant of wheat which covered it was laid..by the rough weather.
1898 H. R. Haggard in Longman's Mag. Oct. 513 There was a very full plant of swedes, which would have produced a fine crop.
b. In abstract sense, without article: growth; esp. in in plant, growing, in leaf; to lose plant, to die off, dwindle away; to miss plant, to fail to germinate. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > growing [phrase]
in plant1844
the world > life > death > [verb (intransitive)] > of plants or crops
diec1384
to give in1840
to lose plant1844
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by poor growth > fail to grow [phrase]
to miss plant1844
1844 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 5 i. 4 Clover..if sown oftener it is apt to fail in plant; and even when in plant it is not very productive unless highly manured.
1847 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 8 ii. 291 The spaces in the..turnips, which have missed plant, are filled up with transplanted swedes.
1852 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 13 i. 58 The wheat often loses plant in the spring.
1889 J. Wrightson Fallow & Fodder Crops viii. 178 It is customary to resow with rape if swedes should happen to miss plant or be eaten off with the ‘fly’.
1889 J. Wrightson Fallow & Fodder Crops ix. 207 Vetches are liable to lose plant in the spring if rolling is neglected.
c. = plant cane n. at Compounds 5. Frequently attributive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > plants yielding sugar or syrup > [noun] > sugar-cane
reeda1398
canamell?a1425
sugar cane1568
sugar1593
sugar-reed1718
plant cane1721
sorgho1760
cane1781
ribbon cane1803
riband cane1811
imphee1857
sweet sorghum1859
sweet sorgho1861
sugar-grass1862
plant1866
broom corn1886
1866 ‘M. Twain’ Lett. from Hawaii (1967) xix. 209 Almost everywhere on the island of Hawaii sugarcane matures in twelve months, both ratoons and plant.
1866 ‘M. Twain’ Lett. from Hawaii (1967) xxiii. 258 This year the ‘plant’ crop on the Wailuku plantation averages 8,000 [pounds per acre].
1928 F. S. Earle Sugar Cane & its Culture ix. 213 With these four implements alone perfectly satisfactory cultivation can be maintained in both plant and ratoon fields.
1951 Jrnl. Farm Econ. 33 403 The task rate per line of cut cane is then set as a function of the yield estimate, the width of the bank.., and whether the cane is a plant or a ratoon crop.
2003 Africa News (Nexis) 3 Dec. Meanwhile, growers seeking SDF funds for purchase of fertilisers and seed cane will be required to repay their loans within 30 months for plant crop and 26 months for ratoon crop.
II. Senses derived from plant v.
4.
a. slang. A hiding place, esp. one for stolen or illicit goods. Also: hidden people or goods; a hoard, spec. a drug user's supply or equipment.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > [noun] > equipment for taking drugs > hiding place for
plant1785
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > stolen goods > [noun] > hoard of
plant1785
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > a secret place, hiding place > [noun] > for storage > for illicit goods
plant1785
trap1930
drop1931
run-in1955
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > a secret place, hiding place > [noun] > for storage > for illicit goods > contents of
plant1819
stash1942
1785 Sessions Papers of Central Criminal Court Apr. 582/1 He opened a place in the wainscot, which is called ‘a plant’, it was a secret cupboard.
1796 Grose's Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue (ed. 3) Plant, the place in the house of the fence, where stolen goods are secreted.
1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. (at cited word) Any thing hid is called, the plant,..such article is said to be in plant; the place of concealment is sometimes called the plant, as ‘I know of a fine plant’; that is a secure hiding-place. To spring a plant, is to find any thing that has been concealed by another. To rise the plant, is to take up and remove any thing that has been hid, whether by yourself or another.
1829 H. Widowson Present State Van Diemen's Land xi. 118 The slabs were very loose; on pulling them up, the plant was sprung and mutton in abundance was discovered stowed away in a large barrel.
1837 J. D. Lang Hist. Acct. New S. Wales II. 52 He had found, to his astonishment and disappointment, that some person had sprung the plant—a cant phrase for discovering and carrying off property which another person has stolen and concealed.
1846 ‘Lord Chief Baron’ Swell's Night Guide (new ed.) 57 ‘Where's the plant, cully?’.. ‘Fenced, in a dunniken.’.. ‘What? Fenced in a crapping ken?’
1874 Hotten's Slang Dict. (rev. ed.) 256 Plant, a hidden store of money or valuables. To ‘spring a plant’ is to unearth another person's hoard.
1926 J. Black You can't Win xii. 160 The sack contained his ‘plant’, an eye dropper with a hypodermic needle soldered to it, and a small paper of morphine.
1926 J. Black You can't Win xx. 314 I could lift the plant and be far away before daylight.
1967 S. Lloyd Lightning Ridge Bk. iii. 8 Gibson never located this plant of opal again.
1975 V. Priddle Larry & Jack 270 My old mate Tom died a proud man as the police could never find his plant of valuable stones.
b. slang. A spy, a detective. Also: a group of (esp. undercover) detectives or police officers.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > law enforcement > investigation of crime > [noun] > detective
plant1812
plain clothes1822
detective1850
plainclothesman1856
mouser1863
D.1869
sleuth1872
tec1879
dee1882
demon1889
sleuth-hound1890
split1891
fink1903
hawkshaw1903
busy1904
dick1905
gumshoe1913
Richard1914
shamus1925
cozzer1950
Five-O1983
the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > secret observation, spying > [noun] > a secret observer, spy
showerOE
spya1325
exploratorc1429
watch1484
inquisitor1580
scout1585
fly1622
otacust1632
evidence1691
lurcher1706
plant1812
society > law > law enforcement > investigation of crime > [noun] > detective > group of
plant1880
1812 Sporting Mag. 39 210 He sold forged notes to a plant [note A person sent for the purpose of detecting him] which led to his untimely end.
1880 Daily Tel. 26 Nov. At Shepperton Lock the keeper..cautioned the defendant as he was going through the lock to take care, as there was a ‘plant’ out that night.
1903 ‘J. Flynt’ Rise of Ruderick Clowd ii. 80 A boy in a Reform School with a ‘plant’ on the ‘outside’ takes a high place among his companions.
1929 D. Hammett Red Harvest xviii. 179 You'll have to..take a plant on Willsson's... I hear whisper Thaler's holing-up there.
1954 W. Tucker Wild Talent (1955) xiv. 184 Paul wondered if this new woman in the adjoining apartment would be a plant... Slater might be playing it doubly safe and ringing in another operative on him.
1992 J. Torrington Swing Hammer Swing! vi. 50 I ice one cruddy little plant and suddenly I'm Public Enemy No. 1.
c. slang. A scheme or plot to swindle or defraud a person; an elaborately planned burglary or other illegal act.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > [noun] > an instance or act of > planned or organized
job1679
put-up job1812
plant1825
voyage of discovery1857
sting1930
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > defrauding or swindling > [noun] > scheme
plant1825
the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > cunning > [noun] > contrivance or machination > instance of
machinationa1475
ingine1531
Machiavellianism1607
intrigue1692
plant1825
angle1958
1825 C. M. Westmacott Eng. Spy I. 241 A regular plant to clear me out.
1836 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz 1st Ser. I. 317 The ‘plant’ is successful; the bet is made; the stranger of course loses.
1860 T. P. Thompson Audi Alteram Partem (1861) III. cxliii. 124 When the classes who live by warfare with society, lay a deliberate scheme by which an honest man's house is to be entered, or his property carried off, it takes at the Police Offices the title of a ‘plant’.
1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 20 Feb. 4 He..charges..Blackburn with having, in language, which has recently become parliamentary, ‘put up a plant’ on his innocent young friend.
1929 D. Hammett Red Harvest xiii. 131 The whole thing was a plant, but I fell for it. Honest to Christ! He was to wait upstairs while I put it to you. I didn't know anything about the others.
1958 Connecticut Hist. Soc. Jan. 21 Occasionally, due to the boasting of the perpetrators, the story of a successful ‘plant’ got around.
d. colloquial. A person or thing placed surreptitiously; a spy or infiltrator; a thing deposited or introduced so as to incriminate or compromise.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > [noun] > one who or that which has been placed
plant1916
1916 Variety 7 Jan. 31/4 But it wasn't through the newspaper writer's ability as an entertainer but to the work of two ‘plants’, a man and a woman, who sang ‘My Mother's Rosary’ from a box.
1926 Amer. Speech 1 436/2 Plant, a member of an act planted in the audience or the orchestra pit who performs his share of the act from there, or who comes upon the stage from the audience to take part in the performance as a supposed non-member of the profession.
1949 Newsweek 3 Oct. 36/3 Fifteen government witnesses, a half-dozen of them FBI ‘plants’ who infiltrated the Communist Party, had taken the stand.
1952 A. Koestler Arrow in Blue iv. xxiii. 191 One of her favourite pastimes was to fabricate apocryphal news items... One of the most successful of her plants ran something as follows.
1969 TV Times (Austral.) 15 Oct. 10/3 One Press agent made an interesting slip of the tongue when he commented: ‘The first thing any publicist does in the morning is to read the plants, I mean the trades.’
1978 ‘G. Vaughan’ Belgrade Drop ii. 15 ‘Heroin!’ the detective shouted... Yardley had never seen the package before... He said: ‘That stuff's a plant.’
1978 M. Walker Infiltrator iv. 48 If she was a plant... I would have to take her along,..and find out who had planted her and why.
1989 J. Sullivan Only Fools & Horses (2000) II. 6th Ser. Episode 6. 132/2 Danny... They found the jewels on him. Tony. It was a plant. Danny. Yeah. It was a right fit-up.
1995 Q June 8/3 Q's role was to ask Mr Yarwood a probing question from the audience; in short, I was a ‘plant’.
5.
a. The premises, fittings, and equipment of a business or (chiefly North American) of an institution; a factory, a place where an industrial process is carried out. In extended use: the workers employed at a business, institution, or factory. Frequently with modifying word.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > factory > [noun]
mill1403
work1581
factory1618
manufacture1623
manuary1625
manufactory1641
fabric1656
hong1726
plant1789
machinery1799
usine1858
oficina1889
officina1906
society > occupation and work > equipment > [noun] > industrial
plant1789
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > [noun] > collectively
machinery1731
enginery1774
plant1789
set1842
installation1882
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > worker in specific place > [noun] > collective in institution or factory
plant1922
1789 H. L. Piozzi Observ. Journey France I. 133 The ground was destined to the purposes of extensive commerce, but the appellation of a plant gave me much disturbance, from my inability to fathom the meaning.
1838 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 239/2 There was very little possibility of transferring these implements (technically called the Plant) from one contract to another.
1841 J. Holland Hist. & Descr. Fossil Fuel, Collieries, & Coal Trade (ed. 2) 295 The parties..contract to..raise the coal..the owner ‘putting down the plant’, i.e. finding the machinery.
1867 W. W. Smyth Treat. Coal & Coal-mining 110 In Durham and Northumberland a single ‘plant’ of pits and engines will work the ground for a mile or two on each side.
1881 Nation (N.Y.) 32 437 The college is to him a sort of industrial enterprise,..and the professors are part of the plant.
1882 Engineer 24 Feb. 133/2 The plant includes one steam crane, three steam travelling cranes, a steam fire-engine, a steam pump, two steam hammers, seven steam engines, three boilers, and a few hundred nail-making machines.
1894 Westm. Gaz. 30 Apr. 5/1 Six plants in the coke region of Pennsylvania are now in operation.
1904 W. T. Mills Struggle for Existence iii. xvii. 216 The great steel plants maintain great laboratories.
1922 Managem. Engineering Feb. 86/2 No more time is lost by having all the plant out on strike for a week than in having a tenth of the force absent for 10 weeks.
1930 J. Buchan Castle Gay xii. 194 He made his way round to the back regions, which had once been stables and coach-houses, and housed now the electric plant and a repairing shop for cars.
1949 Sat. Rev. Lit. (U.S.) 21 May 4/3 Its guiding genius..has seen this school grow from an abstract idea to a two-million-dollar plant.
1960 Washington Post 16 Nov. a 16 The institution has almost never received adequate funds, is understaffed, has an inadequate and deteriorating physical plant and is ‘on its way to becoming a second rate municipal zoo’.
1992 Economist 4 Jan. 24/1 Rover has tripled its productivity over the past decade: its annual output of 35 cars per employee matches that of most European plants.
b. In extended and figurative use: any kind of resource or apparatus used in intellectual or spiritual work.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > intellect > [noun] > intellectual powers
five witsc1200
wits1362
inwitc1380
spiritsc1450
fifteen wits1606
intellectuals1615
intellects1649
furniture1788
plant1861
marbles1902
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > [noun] > instrumentalities employed in spiritual work
plant1861
1861 Ld. Lindsay Scepticism 341 We must take stock here, likewise, of our spiritual plant, our intellectual capital.
1887 Church Times 21 Jan. 54/3 The policy of increasing the plant of the Roman Catholic body here..is still pursued.
1958 Times Lit. Suppl. 10 Oct. 569/2 The new church ‘plant’..is one of the most impressive and novel signs of the boom atmosphere. Mormons, Catholics, Methodists, Seventh Day Adventists, all flourish, to judge by the ecclesiastical building boom.
c. Australian. The equipment, stock, vehicles, etc., of a drover, a farm, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > [noun]
tacklea1325
enginea1393
geara1400
workhorse1463
graith1513
trinketc1525
implementsa1552
furniture1577
store1605
tew1616
thing1662
stock-in-trade1775
tack1777
apparatus1796
work thing1812
gearinga1854
matériel1856
plant1867
hardware1947
workhorse1949
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [noun] > drover's equipment
plant1867
1867 S. Austral. Parl. Papers No. 14. 86 One pound per head for the sheep, with plant and all included.
1903 ‘T. Collins’ Such is Life 7 Soon we became aware of two teams coming to meet us... Victorian poverty spoke in every detail of the working plant.
1934 Bulletin (Sydney) 31 Jan. 32/2 Although he knew our standard of horsemanship so well, he is so ignorant of our calling as to refer to my plant as my ‘herd’.
1954 B. Miles Stars my Blanket xxiv. 211 He..was then about to return to Elsey with his ‘plant’—a drover's ‘plant’ being his spare horses and packs.
1963 A. Lubbock Austral. Roundabout 42 ‘That'll be Dan Daley with his droving plant,’ said Barney, shading his eyes. ‘Plant?’ I queried. ‘Outfit—we call it “plant” here.’
1982 D. Harris Drovers of Outback 13 In my day most of the big back country plants were about forty to fifty horses and an open wagonette..pulled by four or five horses.
d. As a mass noun: machinery and apparatus, either fixed or movable, used in an industrial or engineering process. Chiefly North American: machinery and apparatus used in an institution. Frequently with modifying word.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > [noun]
trama1400
ginc1400
pageant1519
engine1581
machination1605
machina1612
machine1659
mechanism1665
contrivance1667
gimcrack1772
plant1925
power1942
1925 Scribner's Mag. July 31/2 (advt.) Irving School for boys... Modern plant, complete equipment.
1927 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 3 Sept. 374/1 To those American investigators a school meant buildings, equipment, and machinery, or ‘plant’ as they themselves would say.
1957 J. H. Arnison Pract. Road Constr. iii. 52 The shafts for the manholes may be cut out by manual labour, and the main trench by mechanical plant.
1963 Times Rev. Industry Mar. 51/2 Mr. Justice Pennycuick..said that ‘plant’, in its ordinary sense, ‘includes whatever apparatus is used by a businessman for carrying on his business’.
1971 B. Scharf Engin. & its Lang. xvii. 245 Examples of mobile earthmoving plant are bulldozers, graders and scrapers.
1977 Jrnl. Royal Soc. Arts 125 300/2 With the reduction of teacher training the amount of surplus ‘plant’ becoming available would eliminate capital construction costs.
2004 Scunthorpe Evening Tel. (Nexis) 15 June 23 The company also provides a comprehensive overhaul, repair and maintenance service throughout the UK for turbines, boilers and other mechanical plant and equipment.
6. A person's stance or footing; the action of setting the foot down in a specified way.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > posture > action of standing up or rising > [noun] > action or posture of standing
station1526
standing1540
stature1605
plant1817
1817 Sporting Mag. 50 2 The wide area between his feet, when in a standing position, gave him so firm a ‘plant’, if I may so say.
1889 Macmillan's Mag. Mar. 277/1 There was doggedness and obstinacy in the plant of the figures.
1985 B. Wagner in H. Payne Athletes in Action 117 A vigorous heel-toe plant of the foot.
1994 Runner's World Feb. 30/2 To prevent recurrence, make sure your foot plant is straight when running.
7. North American. A deposit of fish spawn, fry, or oysters; a bedded oyster, as opposed to a native one.
ΚΠ
1869 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Agric. 1868 342 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (40th Congr., 3rd Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc.) XV There are numbers of men and vessels employed in procuring ‘plants’ from various places abroad for the artificial beds... The plants are gathered in the months of August, September, and October.
1881 E. Ingersoll Oyster-industry (10th Census U.S.: Bureau of Fisheries) 246 Plant, in some localities, a young oyster, suitable for transplanting.
1942 Sun (Baltimore) 29 Dec. 13/3 The oyster ‘plants’, as we call them, are fetched from the Chesapeake Bay around Betterton or from Virginia.
2004 Vancouver Province (Nexis) 25 Feb. a6 The recent outbreak of sickness among nearly 50 oyster eaters in B.C. remains a ‘real mystery’,..testing of the oysters, oyster plants and the waters in the main producing areas by the agency and Environment Canada have yet to turn up a cause.
8. Billiards, Snooker, and Pool. A shot whereby the cue ball strikes one of two touching or nearly touching balls, so that the other ball is potted; (also) the positioning of the balls enabling such a shot.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > billiards, pool, or snooker > [noun] > positions of balls
frame1868
nursery1869
plant1884
leave1885
set-up1889
snooker1924
pendulum position1927
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > billiards, pool, or snooker > [noun] > actions or types of play > type of stroke
hazard1674
carambole1775
carom1779
cannon1802
screw1825
sidestroke1834
following stroke1837
cannonade1844
five-stroke1847
follow1850
scratch1850
fluke1857
jenny1857
bank shot1859
angle shot1860
draw shot1860
six-stroke1861
run-through1862
spot1868
quill1869
dead-stroke1873
loser1873
push1873
push stroke1873
stab1873
stab screw1873
draw1881
force1881
plant1884
anchor cannon1893
massé1901
angle1902
cradle-cannon1907
pot1907
jump shot1909
carry-along1913
snooker1924
1884 W. Cook Billiards xxiv. 132 There are circumstances under which..the smash becomes..the undoubted game, and this is when there is a ‘plant’ on.
1896 W. Broadfoot in W. Broadfoot et al. Billiards (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) iii. 106 The plant is still possible when the line through the centres falls slightly to the right or left of the pocket.
1937 H. Lindrum Billiards & Snooker 103 B is called a ‘dead plant’. The two reds are touching and in a line with middle of pocket.
1954 Billiards & Snooker (‘Know the Game’ Ser.) 32/2 Set or Plant. The two terms have become practically synonymous... They apply to a position in which two balls (invariably reds) are touching one another. In such a position it is possible to pot one or other of the balls by contacting..the ball nearer the pocket, or..the further one... Correct contact on the ball further from the pocket gives the necessary direction to the one nearer the pocket.
1985 Guardian 29 Apr. 27/5 Taylor..preferring a speculative plant to the middle pocket to an open red playing onto a low value colour for safety.
1995 Snooker Scene May 24/2 O'Sullivan made a frame winning 67 but seemed as if he might be going four down with five to play when, having lost position on 32, he attempted a very dicey plant.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
a. (In sense 2.)
plant disease n.
ΚΠ
1877 Times 13 Dec. 7/3 They further recommended that for the future it should be styled ‘The Seeds and Plant Diseases Committee’.
1947 Sci. News 5 88 Manganese is essential for healthy plant life. Its deficiency in soil..leads to plant diseases such as grey speck of oats.
2001 H. Holmes Secret Life Dust viii. 131 Attacking everything from cereals to apple and coffee trees, the rust fungi cause some of the world's worst plant diseases.
plant egg n.
ΚΠ
1684 T. Burnet Theory of Earth ii. 197 This is not necessary in plant-eggs or vegetable seeds.
1898 Bot. Gaz. 25 322 The orientation of the plant-egg is at bottom a phenomenon of adaptation.
1942 J. Needham Biochem. & Morphol. iii. 669 Might it be that the reason why the polarity of the plant egg is so readily altered..is because the relevant orienting micelles are..wholly or partly cellulose?
1999 Houston Chron. (Nexis) 23 Jan. 1 Pollen is then carried down a stalk, or style, to the ovary where plant sperm is introduced to plant egg.
plant family n.
ΚΠ
1884 Harper's Mag. Feb. 444/1 These plant families..are as curiously diverse as a human family.
1949 J. I. Rodale Org. Method on Farm xiv. 72 Bacteria in the root nodes of a certain plant family, the legumes.
2003 Nature 15 May 230/1 Other plant families have evolved self-incompatibility mechanisms that are radically different to that found in brassicas.
plant ferment n.
ΚΠ
1902 Daily Chron. 27 Nov. 3/3 It is probable the action of the ordinary plant-ferments is of simpler character than is represented in the animal sphere.
plant-fetish n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1899 Daily News 22 Feb. 6/3 The belief in plant-fetishes, wherein the informing spirit or ghost occupies the place of natural property.
plant fibre n.
ΚΠ
1858 A. M. Redfield Zoöl. Sci. 334 (caption) Nest of the Tailor-bird,..curiously formed by stitching with plant fibres or threads of cotton a dead leaf to a living one.
1955 K. Hutton & A. Swallow Chem. for Gen. Sci. xii. 174 Most of our clothes are made from plant fibres, e.g. linen from the stem fibres of flax and cotton from the seed-hairs of the cotton plant.
1997 Independent 3 Feb. i. 20/7 What is the strongest plant fibre? A fibre called ramie is the strongest. Its fibres are eight times as strong as those of cotton.
plant form n.
ΚΠ
1854 Househ. Words 13 May 304/2 The distribution of plant-forms.
1875 A. W. Bennett & W. T. T. Dyer tr. J. von Sachs Text-bk. Bot. 130 In the same manner, from a morphological point of view, stems, leaves, hairs, roots, thallus-branches, are simply members of the plant-form.
1967 E. Short Embroidery & Fabric Collage iv. 97 The stylized plant forms of the Art Nouveau style were used.
1991 Ornament Autumn 16/3 She is delighted when..they are interpreted as having an organic quality, like marine or plant forms.
plant growth n.
ΚΠ
a1855 J. F. Johnston Chem. Common Life (1856) Index 371 Convulsions, geological, influence of, on plant growth.
1899 Appletons' Pop. Sci. Monthly Nov. 100 As water is a leading factor in plant growth, a classification is made..into the plants of the arid regions called xerophytes.
1994 Ricky McMountain Buyer's Guide (Weston, Ont.) Summer 17/2 (advt.) Why concrete? It's durable, maintenance free, jointless to eliminate weeds and plant growth and withstands the harsh Canadian climate.
plant label n.
ΚΠ
1862 Times 26 Mar. 14/1 Dunn's gardener's pencil for writing plant-labels on wood.
1934 J. Grainger Virus Dis. Plants vii. 73 A clean, unused, wooden plant label should be..brought against the underside of a leaf on a plant to be inoculated.
1998 Sunday Tel. 25 Jan. (Mag.) 43/1 We decided it would be foolish not to replenish our plant label supply and buy a waterproof pen.
plant life n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > [noun] > vegetable kingdom
vegetable kingdom1650
vegetal1658
vegetable creation1823
plant life1855
1855 Littell's Living Age 7 July 11/2 Such is the yearly plant-life, as seen by the ordinary cultivator, or watched with daily care by the lover of vegetable nature.
1894 G. M. L. Bell Safar Nameh: Persian Pictures 183 A luxuriant plant-life covered every stem and log.
1984 A. C. Duxbury & A. Duxbury Introd. World's Oceans xii. 382 Nutrients are required by the sea's plant life.
plant material n.
ΚΠ
1882 Gettysburg (Pa.) Compiler 27 Dec. The saving of land and of plant material for plowing down, economy in fencing, increase of manure, and other advantages claimed for soiling, were presented on the one hand, and the extra labor and expense involved on the other.
1937 Amer. Home Apr. 149/2 The use of living plant materials as part of the interior decoration scheme.
1996 D. W. Brown Aromatherapy (Teach Yourself Ser.) ii. 11 The heat and steam cause the cell structure of the plant material to burst and break down, thus freeing the essential oils.
plant movement n.
ΚΠ
1856 L. H. Grindon Life 6 For particulars of various plant-movements of this nature, see Balfour's ‘Class-Book of Botany’.
1915 Indianapolis Star 25 Apr. (Mag. section) A graphic record of plant movements, however minute, must be made.
1992 M. Ingrouille Diversity & Evol. Land Plants 36 There are also a broad range of slow plant movements, tropisms, which can be revealed by time-lapse photography.
plant name n.
ΚΠ
1863 R. C. A. Prior On Pop. Names Brit. Plants pp. xxiii Popular plant names..arise with a higher and more educated class of society, and merely survive in a lower, after they have elsewhere become obsolete.
1935 M. E. Houtzager Unconscious Sound- & Sense-Assimilations 14 Plant-names that have been changed.
1992 Nat. World Spring 28/4 Some [plant names] are simply baffling on first acquaintance, like the longest of our local plant names ‘welcome-home-husband-though-never-so-drunk’ for house-leek.
plant oil n.
ΚΠ
1884 Science 28 Nov. 506/1 Besides pine wood, we may mention petroleum, plant-oils, perfumed rice-flour, pomegranate bark, rhinoceros horn, pearls, and musk.
1934 C. C. Steele Introd. Plant Biochem. vi. 58 Stigmasterol, C30H49OH, occurs in the Calabar Bean, and in various other plant oils, e.g. rape oil and cacao butter.
1996 Green Bk. Beauty 1996 Catal. (Yves Rocher) 19/2 A night-time treatment, which contains an exceptional concentration of restructuring plant oils.
plant ornament n.
ΚΠ
1898 M. A. Buckmaster Elem. Archit. 26 The acanthus..was the favourite plant-ornament with the Greeks and Romans.
1925 B. Rackham tr. E. Hannover Pottery & Porcelain I. iv. 355 Chinese motives..give way to plant ornament, in which a feather-like leaf..is a constantly-recurring element.
2003 Ashmolean Summer 13 The cup..has been ‘raised’ by hammering up a relatively thin sheet, then elaborately embossed, chased, and punched with plant ornament.
plant pot n.
ΚΠ
1842 C. Mathews Career Puffer Hopkins xxi. 163 Down to the plant-pots, and Dutch oven.
1905 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) B. 197 22 The entire plant, soil, and plant-pot were thoroughly sprayed with a solution of permanganate of potassium.
1963 Times 21 Jan. 15/1 The Italian company..plans to make plant pots for the horticultural trade.
1990 Times Educ. Suppl. 19 Oct. 25/1 There is a proper reception area, plant pots and helpful switchboard staff.
plant remains n.
ΚΠ
1864 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 154 280 Where lodgements have been effected out of the direct course of the main stream, plant-remains are more abundant.
1880 A. R. Wallace Island Life 195 Proofs of a mild Arctic climate, in the abundant plant-remains of East Siberia and Amurland.
1990 Sci. News 20 Oct. 245/1 Scientists say they have identified the microscopic ‘fingerprints’ of plant remains on the fossil teeth of Gigantopithecus.
plant root n.
ΚΠ
1671 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 6 3038 The latter is the Plant-root, which the Radicle becoms in its growth.
1883 ‘M. Twain’ Life on Mississippi xlii. 432 To glut the earth and the plant-roots and the air with disease-germs.
1993 Garbage July 56/1 Lazy-bed gardening..relies on super-rich soil that's dug deeply. This allows plant roots to go down, instead of out, meaning you can plant more veggies in less space.
plant species n.
ΚΠ
1858 Times 24 Sept. 7/2 Observations on the geographical distribution of indigenous plants were generalized..by classifying them by regions defined by the proportion of plant species peculiar to them.
1937 Discovery Mar. 83 Not the least puzzling of the specialized animal and plant species of the Hawaiian Islands is the six-foot Silver-sword flower.
1988 Nature Conservancy May 32/2 Two plant species under review for federal protection—dune thistle..and dwarf lake iris..—also grow within the sanctuary's boundaries.
plant-spirit n.
ΚΠ
1876 H. Spencer Princ. Sociol. I. i. xxiii. §182 No explanation of the conceived shape of the plant-spirit.
1915 Man 15 119 For much on plant-spirits and plant-demons in China (whence the Japanese ideas as to such creatures have evidently been largely derived), see de Groot.
1985 Chinese Lit. 7 106 They do not allow for the place of animals and plants in the hierarchy, though both in the popular lore of animal- and plant-spirits..these play a prominent role.
plant stand n.
ΚΠ
1862 Internat. Exhib.: Illustr. Catal. Industr. Dept. II. xxxi. §6070 Ornamental wire plant-stands, model rosery, and verandah.
1903 K. D. Wiggin Rebecca Sunnybrook Farm 247 She buried her face in the blooming geraniums on Miss Maxwell's plant-stand.
1996 Amateur Gardening 25 May 57/1 (advt.) Mini-greenhouses, fruit cages, plant stands.
plant tissue n.
ΚΠ
1880 A. Gray Nat. Sci. & Relig. i. 30 It [sc. the name ‘cell’] was given, naturally enough, to the walls circumscribing cavities in ordinary plant-tissue.
1915 T. L. Lyon et al. Soils viii. 126 The source of practically all soil organic matter is plant tissue.
1995 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Nov. 720/1 When soil freezes, it prevents root action, and, in windy conditions, the plant tissue, particularly of evergreens, desiccates.
plant wealth n.
ΚΠ
1872 Overland Monthly Apr. 347/1 The blooming chaparral or the flowery plains owe to her [sc. the river's] fullness their plant-wealth of purple and gold.
1939 D. C. Peattie Flowering Earth iii. 25 The whole of modern civilization is based upon a whirlwind spending of the plant wealth long ago and very slowly accumulated.
2004 Hindu (Nexis) 19 Feb. This is the first complete translation in English of the 325-year old-Latin treatise on the plant wealth of Asia and the tropics.
plant world n.
ΚΠ
1860 H. S. Olcott Outl. First Course Yale Agric. Lect. 22 There are two grand divisions in the plant world—the flowering and the flowerless.
1938 Amer. Home Jan. 64/2 Cacti are truly the camels of the plant world.
1996 Green Bk. Beauty 1996 Catal. (Yves Rocher) 1/1 Our researchers have just discovered the astonishing resemblance between the defence mechanisms of the plant world and those of our skin.
b. (In sense 5d.)
plant hire n.
ΚΠ
1937 Times 9 Nov. 1/3 Syndicate owning Patent rights covering portable plant and new economical method of rustproofing large-scale steel structures invites management and finance to develop U.K. sales of materials and plant hire to railways.
1976 ‘L. Black’ Healthy Way to Die xi. 118 There were thirty-five companies ranging from a merchant bank to..a plant-hire outfit.
1995 Independent 27 May 6/1 He has sold his plant hire business, apparently handing everything to his wife, and parked four crane lorries and a pick-up outside her home.
C2. Appositive.
plant ancestor n.
ΚΠ
1876 H. Spencer Princ. Sociol. I. i. xxiii. §181 Now if an animal regarded as original progenitor, is therefore reverentially treated; so..may we expect the plant-ancestor will be.
1936 A. V. Kidder in B. C. Hedrick et al. Classic Southwest (1973) ii. 20 Some other plant ancestor, as yet undiscovered, perhaps even extinct as a result of maize culture in the lands favorable to its growth, may exist, or have existed, in South America.
2003 Western Morning News (Plymouth) (Nexis) 25 Aug. 20 Broccoli, turnips, cabbage, radishes, cauliflowers and mustard were all bred by man from a single plant ancestor.
C3. Objective.
a. (In sense 2.)
(a)
plant dispersal n.
ΚΠ
1880 A. R. Wallace Island Life 250 Fruits eaten by birds afford a means of plant-dispersal.
1961 Evolution 15 55/1 As a student of plant-dispersal I am also tempted to compare our finds with the evolution of fruits, which offers a parallel development of primitive and progressive classes, both crossed and influenced by the dispersing agents.
1999 Jrnl. Biogeogr. 26 393/2 This illustrates the potential of plant dispersal by the drift-ice itself.
plant-dropper n.
ΚΠ
1898 Atlantic Monthly Apr. 504/1 The plant-droppers went ahead,..the main transplanting body followed,..and the waterer brought up the rear.
plant-eater n.
ΚΠ
1852 C. Lyell Man. Elem. Geol. (ed. 4) 31 The mouths of a large proportion of the marine univalves have these notches or canals and almost all such species are carnivorous; whereas nearly all testacea having entire mouths, are plant-eaters.
1927 J. B. S. Haldane & J. S. Huxley Animal Biol. iv. 112 Hoofed animals and other plant-eaters.
1994 Guardian 10 Nov. (OnLine section) 11/3 The commonest dinosaur in the region was a plant-eater called protoceratops.
plant-forcer n.
ΚΠ
1903 Westm. Gaz. 19 Feb. 2/1 Being rich in actinic rays, it has been successfully applied as a germ-killer, a plant-forcer, and in the processes of bleaching.
plant growing n.
ΚΠ
1848 Times 7 Aug. 12/1 Single man, age 37, who perfectly understands the forcing of vines, and peaches, also the London system of plant growing.
1897 Appletons' Jrnl. Oct. 376/2 The ladies who take up plant-growing might with a little tact greatly stimulate the public taste in this particular.
1993 Farms for Sale (Huron, Grey & Bruce Counties, Ont.) Aug.–Oct. 9/4 (advt.) Modern barn with plant growing area.
plant hunter n.
ΚΠ
1858 N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 595 (heading) The Plant-Hunters, or Adventures among the Himalay Mountains.
1921 Isis 3 385 Of course he does not know every plant of every nook as does the plant-hunter.
1991 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Apr. 162/2 Plant hunters..sent all the irises they could find to Sir Michael Foster, Professor of Physiology at Cambridge University, for use in hybridisation programmes.
plant-hunting n.
ΚΠ
1878 J. D. Hooker & J. Ball Jrnl. Tour Marocco 346 Ball enjoyed a capital day's plant-hunting at Tangier.
1979 Garden 96/1 The nineteenth century saw a startling growth in plant hunting..new plants for the arboretums and pinetums being established.
1995 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Nov. 710/1 She suggested that I made a plant-hunting trip to Poland.
plant naming n.
ΚΠ
1896 Q. Rev. Jan. 239 The precise and accurate system of modern plant-naming.
1901 Jrnl. Amer. Folk-lore 14 319 There are, however, considerable differences among primitive peoples as to the extent of plant-naming.
1992 L. W. Barsalou Cognitive Psychol. ix. 272 In the absence of frequent contact with nature, people from industrial cultures tend to be less adept at plant naming.
plant worship n.
ΚΠ
1876 H. Spencer Princ. Sociol. I. i. xxiii. §183 Plant-worship,..like the worship of idols and animals, is an aberrant species of ancestor-worship.
1909 Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 22 226 The antiquity of the charm is attested by the plant-worship pointed to, the superstitious lore revealed, and the epic passages introduced.
1993 J. Birtchnell How Humans Relate viii. 199 It is also possible to adopt an I–God relationship to a thing, as in tree and plant worship.
plant-worshipper n.
ΚΠ
1883 Cent. Mag. Sept. 720/2 The ornament which we have derived from Chaldean plant-worshippers.
(b)
plant-bearing adj.
ΚΠ
1859 Philos. Trans. 1858 (Royal Soc.) 148 776 At Fasano these plant-bearing tuffs are very regular in their stratification.
1894 Geol. Mag. Oct. 473 The Carboniferous plant-bearing strata of Roberts' valley.
1995 Advocate (Nexis) 19 Nov. 1 c A bonus, he said, is that his plant-bearing sculptures change with new plants and the seasons of the year.
plant-eating adj.
ΚΠ
1849 C. Lyell 2nd Visit U.S. I. xviii. 340 We collected the plant-eating shell Auricula bidentata.
1941 J. S. Huxley Uniqueness of Man vi. 157 The best-analysed cases concern..plant-eating insects adapted to different food plants.
2001 Pop. Sci. Aug. 21/2 Both dinosaurs are sauropods, giant plant-eating animals with long necks and tails.
plant-feeding adj.
ΚΠ
1778 W. Marshall Minutes Agric. 23 Oct. 1775 The manure is..equally incorporated with the plant-feeding stratum.
1866 S. W. Johnson Peat & its Uses, as Fertilizer & Fuel 54 The meloriation of the physical qualities of a soil..may be more effective for agricultural purposes, than the application of tenfold as much fertilizing, i.e. plant-feeding materials.
1999 Global Ecol. & Biogeogr. 8 323/2 If native shade-tolerant trees largely displaced light-demanders, the diversity of invertebrate species in woods could decline, since the former generally support far fewer plant-feeding species than the latter.
plant-stimulating adj.
ΚΠ
1898 Westm. Gaz. 6 Jan. 2/1 If it [sc. the problem] is solved, we shall probably know better how far to go with this artificial plant-stimulating process.
1936 S. A. Waksman Humus xv. 355 The plant-stimulating substances found in organic composts were characterized as being water-soluble, fairly stable in aqueous solutions, and active even in small concentrations.
2002 Advertiser (Adelaide) (Nexis) 24 May 49 Vermicompost..is highly prized by home gardeners for use as a plant-stimulating additive to potting mix or a valuable soil improver when used as garden mulch.
plant-sucking adj.
ΚΠ
1908 Westm. Gaz. 30 May 7/3 There are very few who realise the enormous number of species that in reality make up this mischievous group of plant-sucking parasites.
1969 New Scientist 2 Oct. 19/1 The Australian plantsucking psyllid bug..lives on eucalyptus leaves.
1987 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) B. 315 99 Such micro-organisms have been shown to be present in other herbivorous organisms with a nitrogen deficient diet, such as plant-sucking insects (for example, aphids, scale insects and whitefly).
b. (In sense 5a.)
plant hirer n.
ΚΠ
1951 Times 30 Mar. 1/2 B.E.B. Limited..Plant Hirer Machinery Specialists.
1973 Times 11 May 19/5 Plant hirers are able to offer such machines.
1999 Constr. News 24 June 20/3 Northumberland plant hirer Hubbway has expanded its operation due to heavy demand in the telehandler and tracked excavators markets.
plant manager n.
ΚΠ
1917 W. J. Lauck & E. Sydenstricker Conditions of Labor in Amer. Industries v. 232 District or visiting nurses are employed by the mining companies, usually under the direction of a local company physician or plant manager.
1957 C. Smith Case of Torches ii. 17 John Tremlett..was made plant manager when the factory opened.
1984 C. A. Heaton Introd. Industr. Chem. i. 32 Sulphuric acid plant managers are probably the only people (excepting the oil producers) who do not like to see the price of oil fall.
C4. Instrumental.
plant-clothed adj.
ΚΠ
1907 N.E.D. at Plant Plant-clothed.
plant-grown adj.
ΚΠ
1902 Daily Chron. 29 Apr. 3/3 The wild plant-grown embankments of railway cuttings.
1958 Renaissance News 11 126 Elegant, beautifully proportioned roman capitals, plastically modelled so that they appear like statues and standing, as it were, before plant-grown backgrounds.
C5.
plant bed n. (a) U.S. a bed of earth used for germinating seeds and growing young plants, formerly esp. tobacco seedlings; (b) Geology a stratum containing fossil plants.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > sowing > [noun] > seed-bed
seedbed1660
plant bed1784
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > sedimentary formation > [noun] > stratum > stratum by constitution > organic remains or fossils
moorlog1655
coal plant1695
leaf bed1697
plant bed1784
oyster bed1833
stem-bed1853
forest-bed1861
starfish bed1861
fish-bed1869
insect-bed1893
lagerstätte1972
1784 J. F. D. Smyth Tour U.S.A. II. lviii. 83 Every tobacco planter..generally has several of these plant-beds in different situations, so that if one should fail another may succeed.
1833 Niles' Reg. 44 411/1 He is clearing new grounds; preparing and burning plant-beds.
1881 Rep. Geol. Explor. N. Zealand 48 The Mataura series in the Hokanui Hills overlying the plant-beds.
1990 New Phytologist 114 159/2 The plant bed..consists of finely bedded carbonaceous silts bearing abundant pollen and spores.
plant beetle n. rare a beetle which inhabits or infests plants; spec. a leaf beetle (family Chrysomelidae).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Phytophaga or Chrysomeloidea > family Chrysomelidae > member of
plant beetle1817
leaf beetle1841
chrysomelid1871
1817 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. II. xxiii. 321 The beautiful tribe of plant-beetles (Chrysomela, F.).
1995 USA Today (Nexis) 8 May 4 d The plant has been altered to produce a protein that targets the destructive Colorado plant beetle.
plant breeder n. a person who cultivates plants in order to improve existing varieties or produce new ones.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > management of plants > propagation of plants > [noun] > one who cultivates varieties to improve them
plant breeder1901
1901 Science 15 Feb. 258/1 It will be found desirable to cross different hybrid seedlings of the same parentage..rather than inbreed a hybrid with its own pollen, as is somewhat generally directed by plant-breeders.
1948 G. D. H. Bell Cultivated Plants Farm p. viii Some of the most important problems facing improved crop production can only be solved by plant breeders.
1995 Yippy Yi Yea Apr. 80/1 Plant breeder Luther Burbank developed this stately white Shasta daisy in California where it thrives in the poor soils of hill country.
plant breeding n. the cultivation of plants in order to improve existing varieties or produce new ones.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > management of plants > propagation of plants > [noun]
multiplicationa1387
multiplying1707
plant breeding1896
1896 Science 25 Sept. 440/2 The speaker..remarked that groups of plants which show marked irregularities in forms are nearly always fertile subjects for plant-breeding.
1970 R. Gorer Devel. Garden Flowers i. 21 The essential basis of plant breeding is selection.
1995 New Scientist 7 Jan. 23/1 It's by no means certain that genetic engineering of such multigenic traits—still at least a decade away—will beat conventional plant breeding toward this end.
plant cane n. (a) sugar cane of one year's growth.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > plants yielding sugar or syrup > [noun] > sugar-cane
reeda1398
canamell?a1425
sugar cane1568
sugar1593
sugar-reed1718
plant cane1721
sorgho1760
cane1781
ribbon cane1803
riband cane1811
imphee1857
sweet sorghum1859
sweet sorgho1861
sugar-grass1862
plant1866
broom corn1886
1721 Acts Assembly Leeward Islands: Antigua (1734) 195 If the Lands be sold by Out-cry, the plant Canes shall be taken off within Eighteen Months, and if Rattoons, in Fourteen Months.
1853 Harper's Mag. Nov. 757 The ‘growing crop’ in Louisiana consists of three kinds of cane: the first is technically called ‘plant cane’ and is that which springs directly from the ‘seed cane’.
1949 Caribbean Q. 1 5 A cane field was not ripe for its first harvest (the ‘plant cane’) until the second winter after its planting.
2001 J. Robinson Voices of Queensland iv. 115 Plant crop, also called plant cane. The crop harvested from a new planting; the first crop [etc.].
plant case n. rare (now historical) a container for plants; spec. a collector's case for carrying botanical specimens.
ΚΠ
1847 R. Fortune Three Years' Wanderings China iv. 50 Two glazed plant cases filled with plants from Amoy, were dashed to pieces.
1875 Jrnl. Royal Geogr. Soc. 45 3 A small plant-case, suspended over the cabin stove, supplied us every week with a little cress and cabbage for the scorbutic.
1926 Sci. Monthly July 86/2 His mutilated remains were found the following day (August 13, 1834) and nearby was his plant-case and the faithful little dog.
1994 Philadelphia Inquirer (Nexis) 4 Nov. e1 The Wardian glass plant case for easy transport of ferns and other plants had been accidentally invented in 1830 by Londoner Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward when he left a moth chrysalis in a covered bottle for several months and found that the plants inside survived without water.
plant centre n. (a) the centre or crown of a plant; (b) a place where plants are found, esp. a garden centre.
ΚΠ
1881 C. Whitehead Hops 8 The plant centres being covered with a few shovels of earth.
1894 Board Agric. Circular x. 4 These traps..should be placed close to the [hop] hills or plant-centres.
1995 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Nov. 730/1 The plant centre is open..each day..and the skills and art of wood-turning will be demonstrated on the weekend of 11–12 November.
plant cot n. Orkney Obsolete an enclosed kitchen garden or nursery; cf. plantiecrue n.
ΚΠ
1686 in Sc. Hist. Rev. (1925) 22 188 Two head rigs above Ja. Ewensones plant coat.
plant cover n. vegetation, esp. when growing closely enough to cover or hide the surface of the ground or protect it from erosion.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > plants collectively > [noun] > covering the surface of the ground
sheet1793
screef1817
ground cover1900
plant cover1906
cover1909
1906 Geogr. Jrnl. 27 72 In the normal cycle the winds are of little importance, because the plant-cover defends the surface of the ground from their action.
1976 Field 18 Nov. 976/3 Where the vegetation has been worn away, the shade of the plant cover lost.., evaporation from the bare surface proceeds apace.
2000 Land & Water Sept. 21/1 RECPs are protective mulch blankets..intended to temporarily stabilize and protect the soil surface from raindrop impact and surface erosion until plant cover can become established.
plant covering n. = plant cover n.
ΚΠ
1892 Proc. Royal Geogr. Soc. 14 667 How dense this plant-covering of the alluvial soil is would best be shown by a picture of the curious network of mangrove roots.
1946 Nature 2 Nov. 605/1 Nomadism..a mode of life, indeed, in which defacement of the plant-covering by ploughing or digging is the worst of economic offences.
1995 D. R. Palmer Summons of Trumpet xvi. 136 At the beginning of the dry season, aircraft saturated the dense jungle with chemical defoliants, killing the luxuriant plant covering.
plant-cutter n. (a) a passerine bird of the South American genus Phytotoma or family Phytotomidae, which habitually bites off the shoots of plants; (b) U.S. History (in plural) rioters in Virginia who systematically cut down tobacco plants.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > [noun] > family Phytotomidae (plant-cutter)
plant-cutter1802
leaf-cutter1878
1802 J. Latham Gen. Synopsis Birds Supp. II. 212 Plant-cutter.
1850 Fraser's Mag. May 551 Phytotoma rara, the Chilian Plant-cutter. It lives on plants which it cuts off close to the root.
1855 C. Campbell in R. Beverley Hist. Virginia Introd. 2 A riot-act was also passed, making plant-cutting high treason, the necessity of which act evinces the illegality of the execution of these unfortunate plant-cutters.
1910 William & Mary Coll. Q. Hist. Mag. 19 2 There was trouble in 1682, about an over-production of tobacco..the Governor and Council demanded the journal of the House, which Beverley again refused; and it was partly on this account, as well as on account of his sympathy for the poor plant cutters, that he was subjected to much persecution.
1960 William & Mary Q. 17 5 The best example of a constructive levying of war is the Virginia plant-cutters' rebellion in 1681.
1985 C. M. Perrins Encycl. Birds 329 The southern populations of the White-tipped plantcutter, the smallest and brightest species, migrate to winter in bushy pastures of northeast Argentina and Uruguay.
plant-feeder n. (a) an animal, esp. an insect, that feeds on plants; (b) a feeder of plants (in various senses of feeder n., spec. any of various devices used for automatic watering, esp. of house plants); (also) = plant food n. (a).
ΚΠ
1878 Amer. Naturalist 12 214 Ratzeburg..believed that it was a plant-feeder in the immature state.
1886 Decatur (Illinois) Daily Republican 8 Oct. 4/3 At present he [sc. the plant grower] is but little more than a plant feeder and attendant.
1930 Nature Mag. Mar. 171/2 The majority of the beetles are plant feeders, and some, such as the ladybirds, are very beneficial.
1975 Bucks County (Pa.) Courier Times 3 Apr. b23/1 (advt.) Cordless electric yard & garden sprayer... Also doubles as a plant feeder.
1994 Washington Post (Nexis) 15 Dec. t17 Avoid fertilizing with a plant feeder until the end of February.
2003 Calgary (Alberta) Sun (Nexis) 5 Apr. 37 A worry-free—and stylish—way to water plants is to use glass ‘automatic plant feeders.’
plant food n. (a) a substance, or the substances collectively, providing the nutrients necessary for plant growth; the food of plants; (b) food, or a foodstuff, for humans or animals which consists of plants or plant products.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > plant food > [noun]
pabuluma1661
vegetable food1728
plant food1853
1853 Sci. Amer. 31 Dec. 125/2 Where these elements [sc. hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen] are in abundance, science only is wanting to combine and unite them in such a manner as to produce plenty of plant food.
1887 C. A. Moloney Sketch Forestry W. Afr. 101 Virgin forest soil is considered best..because it contains sufficient plant-food.
1917 M. S. Rose Feeding Family i. 7 Plant foods may be called the original source of human energy. But animals, eating the plants, may work over the protein, fat, and carbohydrate of their plant food in their internal laboratories, the living cells.
1976 ‘J. M. Berrisford’ Backyards & Tiny Gardens viii. 59 Such a growing medium contains no plant foods, so fertilizers must be added before planting.
1998 R. A. Ricker Smart Guide to Vitamins & Healing Suppl. vii. 141 Many plant foods, most notably soy bean, contain natural components called phytoestrogens.
2003 N.Y. Mag. 15 Sept. 16/2 They [sc. worms] will convert three pounds of leftover arugula stems and eggshells per week into ‘black gold’.., which can be used for anything from plant food to potting soil.
plant geographer n. = phytogeographer n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > specific branches or aspects of botany > one knowledgeable in
fossil botanist1832
phytogeographer1859
palaeophytologist1869
neo-botanist1870
palaeobotanist1876
phytopalaeontologist1882
plant geographer1883
phytopathologist1886
plant physiologist1888
plant pathologist1894
phytoecologist1899
phytochemist1914
phytosociologist1926
astrobotanist1952
archaeobotanist1954
1883 Times 26 Dec. 7/7 It has been shown by Professor Schubeler, a Norwegian plant-geographer, that most plants in high latitudes produce much larger and heavier seeds than in warmer regions nearer the equator.
1973 P. A. Colinvaux Introd. Ecol. ii. 27 On the grand-scale, maps of climate based on the plant geographer's boundaries were useful.
2001 Hist. Today May 41/1 This gap was finally filled by pioneer plant geographer and ecologist Andreas Franz Wilhelm Schimper (1856–1901) in his founding work on synecology.
plant geography n. = phytogeography n.; (also) a description of plant distribution.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > specific branches or aspects of botany
phytognomy1643
topology1659
vegetable statics1691
cryptogamy1783
fossil botany1822
nomology1825
structural botany1835
phytochemistry1837
phytochimy1847
phytogeography1847
astrobotany1851
phytonomy1851
phytophysiology1854
palaeophytology1857
phytobiology1860
phytopathology1864
plant physiology1870
palaeobotany1872
plant geography1878
phytopalaeontology1879
plant pathology1891
ethnobotany1896
floristic1898
phyteconomy1898
phytoteratology1898
phytoecology1899
geobotany1904
phytosociology1917
archaeobotany1954
palaeoethnobotany1959
1878 Proc. Royal Geogr. Soc. 22 440 The African tropical flora undoubtedly affords indications even in the present fragmentary state of our knowledge about it, of the existence of very difficult problems in the study of its plant-geography.
1903 W. R. Fisher tr. A. F. W. Schimper Plant-geogr. p. vi The connexion between the forms of plants and the external conditions at different points on the earth's surface forms the subject-matter of oecological plant-geography.
1934 H. Gilbert-Carter tr. C. Raunkiaer Life Forms of Plants iv. 111 The units of floristic plant geography are the same as those of systematic botany.
1992 P. J. Bowler Fontana Hist. Environmental Sci. (BNC) 370 Oscar Drude..of the Dresden botanical gardens published a plant geography of Germany in 1896.
plant hopper n. any of numerous small, leaping, plant-sucking insects (bugs) of the homopteran superfamily Fulgoroidea, including some pests of rice and sugar cane.
ΚΠ
1920 Ecology 1 194 The calcar is a very specialized structure in a single subfamily of the plant hoppers (Fulgoridae).
1956 Nature 178 641 (heading) Effect of crowding during the larval period on the determination of the wing-form of an adult plant-hopper.
1997 Guardian 20 Nov. (Online section) 11/2 Epidemics of pests such as the brown planthopper ran through Asia's new varieties of rice.
plant hormone n. Botany = hormone n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > substance > process stimulators or inhibitors > hormone > [noun] > in plants
hormone1911
wound hormone1921
plant hormone1932
phytohormone1933
auxin1934
heteroauxin1935
florigen1936
traumatic acid1939
abscisin1961
zeatin1963
cytokinin1965
antheridiol1967
abscisic acid1968
oogoniol1975
1932 Science 15 July 42/2 Another extremist hypothesis..is..that many highly parasitic micro-organisms have lost their primordial autonomy, and can now multiply only under the influence of certain extraneous plant hormones..or other growth-stimulating factors.
1951 Jrnl. Chem. Education 28 113 We now use plant hormones to propagate plants, prevent preharvest drop of apples,..and defoliate plants without killing the stems.
1959 L. J. Audus Plant Growth Substances i. 18 Plant hormones are substances which regulate..some aspect of plant growth and which are produced by the organism itself. They may be growth hormones, flowering hormones, and so forth.
1992 Nat. Hist. Feb. 56/2 Pollen, delivered to the orchid flower by a visiting insect, carries with it the plant hormone auxin.
plant house n. (a) a greenhouse or conservatory; (b) now rare, a building containing industrial plant.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > building containing industrial plant > [noun]
plant house1800
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > equipment and buildings > [noun] > greenhouse or glass-house
glasshousea1633
greenhouse1664
house1726
winter garden1736
plant house1800
serre1819
glass1838
tunnel house1973
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > equipment and buildings > [noun] > greenhouse or glass-house > conservatory
conservatory1664
conserve1664
infirmary1707
winter garden1736
plant house1800
1800 J. Anderson Recreations in Agric. 2 150 A plant-house, thus considerably elevated, will always be much preferable to those in a lower situation, because they will have less chance of being screened by the shade of higher objects.
1863 Horticulturist 18 306 We again have the satisfaction of presenting two examples of Plant Houses; one a Green-house, and the other a Cold Grapery.
1909 Westm. Gaz. 6 May 5/3 A plant-house is being erected outside the south wall of the provincial capital.
1985 Austral. Business 4 Sept. 112/1 A seasonal-oriented solar roof for indoor pools, planthouses and sunrooms has been introduced.
plant kingdom n. plants collectively, as one of the major divisions of the natural world (now in Biology usually excluding fungi, bacteria, and often algae and protists).
ΚΠ
1858 New Englander (New Haven, Connecticut) Feb. 93 The institution of the Plant Kingdom,—the appointment and creation of that kind of existence, which we call a plant, or an exhibition of the new principle, life, in an organism of the plant type.
1884 R. Folkard Plant Lore, Legends & Lyrics (title page) Folk-Lore of the Plant-Kingdom.
1984 A. C. Duxbury & A. Duxbury Introd. World's Oceans xv. 469 Biologists have different opinions on including the algae in the plant kingdom.
2003 Guardian 16 Jan. (Online section) 11/4 The combination of two pieces of biomimicry, one from the plant kingdom, one from the animal, shows what a powerful paradigm biomimetics has become.
plant-living adj. Obsolete rare that has characteristics of both an animal and a plant; = zoophytic adj.
ΚΠ
1594 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. II. 134 Those creatures which the Græcians and Latins call by a name, which in our language signifieth as much as plant-liuing creatures [Fr. Plantanimees, ou Plantanimales], because they are of a middle nature betweene plants and liuing creatures.
plant marker n. a small marker set in the ground beside a plant and bearing the plant's name; a plant label.
ΚΠ
1907 N.E.D. at Plant Plant-marker.
1998 Garden Answers Sept. 40/4 Old toothbrushes are used as dibbers or plant markers.
plant of gluttony n. Obsolete rare the dwarf cornel, Cornus suecica (family Cornaceae), a rhizomatous plant having purple flowers and bright red berries that were supposed to stimulate the appetite.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. I. 333/2 The little red berries..are supposed to increase the appetite, the plant [sc. Cornus suecica] being called lus-a-chrasis, or Plant of gluttony.
plant pathologist n. = phytopathologist n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > specific branches or aspects of botany > one knowledgeable in
fossil botanist1832
phytogeographer1859
palaeophytologist1869
neo-botanist1870
palaeobotanist1876
phytopalaeontologist1882
plant geographer1883
phytopathologist1886
plant physiologist1888
plant pathologist1894
phytoecologist1899
phytochemist1914
phytosociologist1926
astrobotanist1952
archaeobotanist1954
1894 W. Somerville & H. M. Ward tr. R. Hartig Text-bk. Dis. Trees Introd. 17 The skilled plant-pathologist will seldom fail to recognize with certainty the true character of a disease.
1977 Daily Tel. 6 July 2/1 Dr Alan Walker, Ministry Plant Pathologist, said that cereal diseases which could cut yield by up to 15 per cent. were minimal this year.
1999 BBC Gardeners' World Apr. 32/3 Australian plant pathologists have developed a natural compound, based on rape-seed oil, that acts as a fungicide, protecting grapevines from powdery mildew.
plant pathology n. = phytopathology n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > specific branches or aspects of botany
phytognomy1643
topology1659
vegetable statics1691
cryptogamy1783
fossil botany1822
nomology1825
structural botany1835
phytochemistry1837
phytochimy1847
phytogeography1847
astrobotany1851
phytonomy1851
phytophysiology1854
palaeophytology1857
phytobiology1860
phytopathology1864
plant physiology1870
palaeobotany1872
plant geography1878
phytopalaeontology1879
plant pathology1891
ethnobotany1896
floristic1898
phyteconomy1898
phytoteratology1898
phytoecology1899
geobotany1904
phytosociology1917
archaeobotany1954
palaeoethnobotany1959
1891 Bot. Gaz. 16 188 Dr. A. N. Berlese has been called to the position of professor of botany and plant-pathology at the Royal School of Viticulture, at Avellino.
1973 Nature 27 Apr. 595/2 Plant pathology..is to plants what the whole of medicine and veterinary science is to man and animals.
2004 Financial Times (Nexis) 10 July 14 Our professor of plant pathology..specialised in diseases of tobacco.
plant physiologist n. a scientist specializing in plant physiology.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > specific branches or aspects of botany > one knowledgeable in
fossil botanist1832
phytogeographer1859
palaeophytologist1869
neo-botanist1870
palaeobotanist1876
phytopalaeontologist1882
plant geographer1883
phytopathologist1886
plant physiologist1888
plant pathologist1894
phytoecologist1899
phytochemist1914
phytosociologist1926
astrobotanist1952
archaeobotanist1954
1888 Bot. Gaz. 13 219 We hardly think that this view will be favorably received by plant physiologists.
1931 W. O. James Introd. Plant Physiol. i. 2 The methods used by plant physiologists..are mainly derived from various branches of chemistry and physics.
2001 Isis 92 299 Before World War II, little relation was perceived between poisons like Sinox and plant hormones, even by the plant physiologists most concerned with weed control.
plant physiology n. the branch of science that deals with the normal functioning of plants and their parts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > specific branches or aspects of botany
phytognomy1643
topology1659
vegetable statics1691
cryptogamy1783
fossil botany1822
nomology1825
structural botany1835
phytochemistry1837
phytochimy1847
phytogeography1847
astrobotany1851
phytonomy1851
phytophysiology1854
palaeophytology1857
phytobiology1860
phytopathology1864
plant physiology1870
palaeobotany1872
plant geography1878
phytopalaeontology1879
plant pathology1891
ethnobotany1896
floristic1898
phyteconomy1898
phytoteratology1898
phytoecology1899
geobotany1904
phytosociology1917
archaeobotany1954
palaeoethnobotany1959
1870 Amer. Naturalist 4 182 In view of the many questions in plant-physiology which are now being asked, it seems to be a sort of botanical dissipation to give up to the name what is due to the plant.
1937 W. H. S. Smith Let. 10 July in Young Man's Country (1977) ii. 80 I was interested to see the place where all his [sc. Tagore's] disciples are following out the lines of research suggested by his highly original work in plant-physiology.
1968 F. C. Steward Growth & Organization in Plants p. iii The author's, and indeed a customary, approach to plant physiology is deeply ingrained in the study of cells, their membranes and particulate inclusions, their metabolism and responses to stimuli.
1993 Edinb. Postgrad. Prospectus 1994 (BNC) 89 It also contains strong research groups working on plant and fungal physiology.
plant-plot n. Obsolete a nursery for young plants. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > garden > division or part of garden > [noun] > bed or plot > nursery plot
nursery1556
pepinnier1601
plant-plot1610
pepinnery1611
nursery bed1669
nursery garden1693
nursery ground1789
1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. i. 100 Tributes also were imposed..for Corne-grounds, Plant-plots [L. plantarijs], Groves or Parks.
1612 J. Speed Theatre of Empire of Great Brit. i. xxiii. 45/2 From Greeke-Lad, a towne in Wilt shire the Academy was translated vnto Oxford, as vnto a Plant-plot, both more pleasing and fruitfull.
plant science n. botany or any of its branches, esp. those concerned with the biochemical, genetic, physiological, and evolutionary aspects of plants; cf. botany n. 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun]
herbarism1597
botany1647
botanics1658
botanology1658
phytology1658
herbalism1664
botanomy1716
botanism1725
plant science1846
wort-cunning1864
1846 I. Steiner Elem. Reader, German & Eng. ii. 139 Ich studire gern die Pflanzenkunde: I study gladly the plant-science.
1900 Glasgow Herald 13 Feb. 4/5 This book should prove useful in educating children in the elements of plant-science.
1962 AIBS Bull. 12 36/2 The transformation of a normal plant cell to a tumor cell that grows out of control represents a challenge for investigators in various plant sciences.
2011 J. Boyle in L. Sayre & S. Clark Fields of Learning i. 48 Reading about agricultural ecosystems in my plant science textbook is not nearly as powerful as watching those principles in action on a frigid Sunday at the greenhouse.
plant stove n. Obsolete a heated greenhouse, a hothouse; = stove n.1 3.
ΚΠ
1855 P. Neill et al. Pract. Gardener's Compan. (rev. ed.) 285 The Plant-Stove may either be a dry-stove or a bark-stove, or both combined, and is applied to the cultivation of tropical plants which require an elevated temperature.
1880 Encycl. Brit. XII. 222/2 The Plant Stove differs in no respect from the greenhouse except in having a greater extent of hot-water pipes for the purpose of securing a greater degree of heat.
plant-tin n. Obsolete rare a plant case made of metal.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > tools and implements > [noun] > types of basket or vessel
bin1737
turpentine bucket1877
plant-tin1896
1896 Daily News 12 Dec. 6/2 In the winter there is no occupation for plant-tin or insect-net.
plant wax n. wax obtained from plants; a particular kind of this.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > waxy materials > [noun] > derived from plants
vegetable wax1721
wax1799
tree-wax1857
plant wax1924
1924 J. A. Thomson Sci. Old & New xviii. 101 There are plant-waxes as well as animal-waxes.
1934 C. C. Steele Introd. Plant Biochem. ii. iii. 26 Still higher homologues [of ethyl alcohol] are constituents of both plant and animal waxes.., being mainly combined with acids in the form of esters.
1997 Biochemist Feb. 13/1 Plant waxes are a mixture of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs), primary and secondary alcohols, aldehydes, ketones and esters.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

plantn.2

Forms: Middle English–1500s plante, Middle English–1500s plaunte, 1500s–1700s plant.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French plante; Latin planta.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French plante (also in Anglo-Norman as plaunte; c1150 in Old French; French plante ) and its etymon classical Latin planta sole of the foot, ultimately < the same Indo-European base as ancient Greek πλατύς broad (see plat adv.). Compare Old Occitan planta (c1350 or earlier; Occitan planta del pè), Catalan planta (c1400), Spanish planta (c1200 or earlier), Portuguese planta (14th cent.; now planta do pé), Italian pianta (a1292).
Obsolete.
The sole of the foot.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > limb > extremities > foot > [noun] > sole
solec1325
foot solea1382
planta1382
step1382
palmc1450
plat1574
treadc1720
baby sole1864
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1969) Isa. i. 6 Fro þe plante [L. planta] of þe foot vn to þe top þer is not in hym helþe.
a1450 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Caius 336/725) (1970) 29 (MED) Of fracture..of þe plaunte of þe foot.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 15/2 Fro the plante of his foot vnto the toppe of his heed was none hole place.
a1500 (a1450) tr. Secreta Secret. (Ashm. 396) (1977) 26 Of the plantes of fete.
1580 Sir P. Sidney tr. Psalmes David xviii. x My heeles and plants Thou didst from stumbling slip sustaine.
1616 B. Jonson Oberon 403 in Wks. I Knottie legs, and plants of clay Seeke for ease, or loue delay.
1655 tr. C. Sorel Comical Hist. Francion xii. 24 Before you put the Iron to the plant of his Feet, give me a cord.
1704 J. Elsum Art of Painting after Ital. Manner (new ed.) x. 27 From the Top of the Heel, to the Plant of the Foot.
1798 W. Thomson Enq. Elem. Princ. Beauty ii. iv. 153 The extended length from the girdle (or upper part of the os ilium or the hips, to the ground or plant of the foot).
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

plantn.3

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French plant.
Etymology: < French †plant (see plan n., and compare the Italian cognate cited at that entry). Compare earlier plan n.
Obsolete. rare.
A ground plan.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > earth sciences > geography > map-making > map > [noun] > plan or scheme
survey1610
plant1624
plane1639
scheme1649
field plot1659
plan1700
1624 H. Wotton Elements Archit. in Reliquiæ Wottonianæ (1651) 256 Much less upon a bare Plant thereof, as they call the Schiographia or Ground lines.
1665 J. Webb Vindic. Stone-Heng (1725) 20 The outward Circle of Mr. Jones his Plant No. 6 of the Ruins.
1665 J. Webb Vindic. Stone-Heng Restored 25 The plant of the main structure is in diameter, one third part of the diameter of the whole extent, or circumvallation.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2020).

plantv.

Brit. /plɑːnt/, /plant/, U.S. /plænt/
Forms: Old English plantian, Old English plontia (Northumbrian), Middle English planed (past participle, transmission error), Middle English plantt, Middle English plattes (3rd singular present indicative, transmission error), Middle English plaunt, Middle English plaunte, Middle English plawnte, Middle English plawted (past tense, transmission error), Middle English plonte, Middle English–1600s plante, Middle English– plant, 1700s plaint; Scottish pre-1700 planct, pre-1700 plannt, pre-1700 plantt, pre-1700 plaunt, pre-1700 plaunte, pre-1700 playnt, pre-1700 plent, pre-1700 1700s plaint, pre-1700 1700s– plant. N.E.D.(1907) also records a form early Middle English plantie.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: Latin plantāre; French planter.
Etymology: In Old English < classical Latin plantāre (see below); subsequently reinforced by Anglo-Norman plaunter and Anglo-Norman Old French, Middle French, French planter to plant (a seed or growing thing) in the earth (c1130), to insert (a thing) firmly in the ground or in another thing (1188), to put (a thing) in place (1188), to stand (a thing) in an upright position (c1240), to bury (a person) (c1374 or earlier; rare, now obsolete), to hide, conceal (a thing) (second half of the 15th cent. in Villon, rare), to place or station (oneself) (1512, used reflexively), to abandon (a person or thing) (1557, earliest with a person as object; 1646 or earlier in the phrase planter là ), in Anglo-Norman also to found, establish (a religion or doctrine), to build, erect (buildings) (both late 13th cent. or earlier), to settle, establish (a person) in a place (early 14th cent. or earlier in reflexive use, end of the 14th cent. or earlier in transitive use) < classical Latin plantāre to propagate from cuttings, to press into the ground with the feet, in post-classical Latin also to cause to prosper, to found, establish, to place firmly (Vulgate), to establish a person in a doctrine or precept (3rd cent.), to instil in the mind or heart (5th cent. or later), to implant, to settle (12th cent., 1624 in British sources), to settle, colonize (c1362 in a British source) < planta plant n.1Compare Old Occitan, Occitan plantar (second half of the 12th cent.), Catalan plantar (13th cent.), Spanish plantar (1148), Italian piantare (1280), Portuguese plantar (1025 in past participle †plamtato ), all earliest in sense 1a. The Latin verb was also borrowed into other Germanic languages, often at an early date: compare Old Frisian plantia , plontia (West Frisian plantsje ), Middle Dutch, Dutch planten , Middle Low German planten , Old High German phlanzōn (Middle High German phlanzen , German pflanzen ), Old Icelandic, Icelandic planta , and (via Middle Low German) Old Swedish, Swedish planta , Old Danish, Danish plante . In Old English the prefixed form geplantian is also attested; compare also aplantian to plant, oferplantian overplant v., underplantian underplant v. With sense 9a compare French (colloquial) †planter un soufflet sur to slap (a person) (1718). With sense 9b compare French planter un baiser (1671, subsequently from 1869 in Littré; earlier in Old French (1250 in an apparently isolated attestation)).
1.
a. transitive. To set or place (a seed, bulb, or growing thing) in the ground so that it may take root and grow; to establish (a garden, orchard, etc.) by doing this. Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > planting > plant plants [verb (transitive)]
setc725
planteOE
impc1420
enroot1490
implant1610
to put in1657
to plant out1664
to put out1699
to stop in1826
to put down1865
society > inhabiting and dwelling > furnishing with inhabitants > colonizing > colonize (a place) [verb (transitive)] > settle (a person) as colonist
planteOE
settle1570
colonize1735
eOE (Mercian) Vespasian Psalter (1965) lxxix. 8 (9) Vineam ex Aegypto transtulisti eiecisti gentes et plantasti eam : wingeard of agyptum ðu afirdes awurpe ðeode & plantades hie.
OE Ælfric Old Eng. Hexateuch: Gen. (Claud.) xxi. 33 Abraham ða plantode anne holt on Bersabeae.
?a1160 Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) (Peterborough contin.) anno 1137 Martin abbot..plantede winiærd, & makede mani weorkes, & wende þe tun betere þan it ær wæs.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 51 Ys ȝeplanted an iblesced treu amidde ðare hali chereche.
c1395 G. Chaucer Wife of Bath's Tale 764 Yif me a plante of thilke blessed tree, And in my gardyn planted [v.r. plauntede] shal it be.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 300v Tree wormes..ben y-gendred..in trees þat ben oþer yfelled oþer y-plaunted in vndewe tyme.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 8239 All frutes he plantede in þat place.
?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 137 He gert plant þerin also all maner of erbez.
a1450 (a1400) Ten Commandments (Bodl.) in T. Arnold Sel. Eng. Wks. J. Wyclif (1871) III. 91 Plaunte þou a vyne.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) 1 Cor. iii. 6–7 I have planted; Apollo watred..Nether is he that planteth eny thynge nether he that watreth.
a1532 in G. S. Stevenson Pieces from Makculloch & Gray MSS (1918) iv. 37 My wyne ȝard I planntit thé Full of gude sawr and suetenes.
1588 T. Hariot Briefe Rep. Virginia sig. B2 And by the meanes of sowing & planting it in good ground, it will be farre greater, better, and more plentifull then it is.
1615 R. Hamor True Disc. Present Estate Virginia 17 Our people were fedde out of the common store and laboured iointly in the manuring of the ground, and planting corne.
1654 J. Lamont Diary (1830) 79 I planted some elme kies in the garden yeard.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iv, in tr. Virgil Wks. 123 Plant..Wild Olive Trees, or Palms, before the buisy Shop. View more context for this quotation
1756 T. Amory Life John Buncle I. 40 Noah did then begin to be an husbandman; he planted a vineyard; he invented wine.
1849 E. Bulwer-Lytton Caxtons I. ii. iii. 73 You can plant a very extensive apple-orchard on a grand scale.
1868 Queen Victoria Jrnl. 19 Each of us planted two trees, a fir and an oak.
1896 Forum July 515 Our forefathers..came to work, to plant, to reap, where they might worship God with freedom.
1915 A. S. Neill Dominie's Log xviii. 213 One of those mean men who would plant potatoes on his mother's grave if the cemetery authorities would allow it.
1961 Atlanta Constit. 17 Aug. 5 The people who try to raise and can meat, to plant, grow vegetables, and put them up.
1991 P. Jenkins Fields of Vision vi. 50 He planted a garden every year that went over into my land.
b. transitive. To introduce or release (a type of animal) into an area or country, esp. as a new breed; (chiefly U.S.) spec. to deposit (young fish, spawn, oysters, etc.) in a river or lake to live or grow. Occasionally with out.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > balance of nature > distribution > [verb (transitive)] > naturalize
naturalizec1708
plant1899
1552 in D. H. Fleming Hist. Notes Links St. Andrews (1893) 103 Reserveing..possessioun..als weill quhair the saidis cuniggis salbe plantit..as utheris pairtis of the saidis linkis.
1612 Acts Parl. Scotl. (1816) IV. 517/2 Libertie to the said archiebischop to plant and place conyngis and clappers within the Linkis.
1871 Pennsylvania Laws 276 Fishes planted and retained in private ponds shall be at the disposal of their owners.
1899 19th Cent. Sept. 405 Brought from the Pacific and ‘planted’ in the Great Lakes, these steel-heads are the most prized of all the Salmonidae.
1903 Daily Chron. 25 Mar. 7/2 Mr. Henry Herman Kater..in 1839 chartered the Euphrates for the purpose of planting blood horses in Australia.
1945 Jefferson County (Golden, Colorado) Republican 2 May 1/5 Clear Creek, in the Golden region, is on our schedule for planting trout this year.
1953 Our Underwater Farm (Indiana State Dept. Educ.) 40 An oysterman dumping shells might tell you that he is ‘planting an oyster bed’.
1962 Times 19 May 11/4 Every partridge-rearing system encounters its critical phase when the birds are ‘planted out’.
2002 Irish News (Nexis) 4 July 40 These unique fish have been saved and are now prospering. This was achieved initially by the use of hatcheries and planting out fry in some of the better and more pristine spawning areas.
c. transitive and intransitive. to plant out: to transfer (a young plant) from a pot, greenhouse, cold frame, etc., to the open ground; to set out (seedlings) at intervals ensuring room for growth; to arrange (plants or trees) in a piece of ground. Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > planting > plant plants [verb (transitive)]
setc725
planteOE
impc1420
enroot1490
implant1610
to put in1657
to plant out1664
to put out1699
to stop in1826
to put down1865
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > planting > plant or replant [verb (intransitive)]
replant1572
set1690
to plant out1793
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > management of plants > [verb (transitive)] > plant out
to put out1699
to plant out1793
1664 J. Evelyn Kalendarium Hortense 60 in Sylva Now also plant out your Colly-flowers to have early.
1736 S.-Carolina Gaz. 5 June 3/2 A nursery of 5 or 600 mulberry trees of about two years old, fit to plant out.
1769 G. White Jrnl. 28 July (1970) ii. 17 No savoys, endives, etc. can be planted-out.
1793 Trans. Soc. Arts (ed. 2) 5 54 When they [sc. plants] are planted out, after once hoeing, they will take care of themselves.
1846 J. Baxter Libr. Pract. Agric. (ed. 4) I. 323 The more tender kinds should not be thinned till some time after they have been planted out.
1858 G. Glenny Gardener's Every-day Bk. (new ed.) 179/1 Plant out all the sorts and sow once or twice others to succeed.
1901 Year-bk. U.S. Dept. Agric. 1900 373 Each orchardist will no doubt develop some method of his own in planting out the orchard.
1927 R. Kipling Limits & Renewals (1932) 15 Sept. 170 I was planting out plants from my garden.
1975 B. Dougherty Green Gardener x. 115 Avoid touching their [sc. tomatoes'] stems when planting out, holding them only by the leaflets.
1990 Pract. Gardening Nov. 57/2 I raised hundreds of half-hardy bedding plants in my small unheated greenhouse and in due season I planted out dwarf French marigold, rudbeckia,..and sunflowers.
d. intransitive. Of a seed or growing thing: to take root and grow to become a plant. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > seed > be a seed [verb (intransitive)] > germinate or grow
acrospirec1430
chit1601
fluster1650
pullulate1657
plant1849
1692 A. Symson Large Descr. Galloway (1823) 76 After the same [beirland] hath been till'd..and the weeds begin to plant, as their phrase is, they sow it.
1849 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 10 i. 55 The seed was put in precisely the same as [in] the preceding year, but it never planted so well.
2.
a. transitive. To found or establish (a community or society, esp. a colony or church).
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > initiate [verb (transitive)] > found or establish
arear?a800
astellc885
planteOE
i-set971
onstellOE
rightOE
stathelOE
raisec1175
stofnec1175
stablea1300
morec1300
ordainc1325
fermc1330
foundc1330
instore1382
instituec1384
establec1386
firmc1425
roota1450
steadfastc1450
establishc1460
institute1483
to set up1525
radicate1531
invent1546
constitute1549
ordinate1555
rampire1555
upset1559
stay1560
erect1565
makea1568
settle1582
stablish1590
seminarize1593
statuminatea1628
hain1635
bottom1657
haft1755
start1824
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xl. 293 He underfeng ða halgan gesomnunga to plantianne & to ymbhweorfanne, sua se ceorl deð his ortgeard.
c1450 J. Capgrave Life St. Augustine (1910) 42 Augustin with grete auctortie distroyed heresie and planted new religion.
a1500 Rule Minoresses in W. W. Seton Two 15th Cent. Franciscan Rules (1914) 81 (MED) We ordeynid & establissin þat þis rule..be kept perpetuali in þe same mynster & in other minsteris whoche schal be fownded here after or plantid.
1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde iii. xi. f. 160v They myght in this prouince plant a newe colonie or habitation.
1603 R. Johnson tr. G. Botero Hist. Descr. Worlde 146 This hapeneth by meanes of the Crimme Tartar, that will neither himselfe plant townes to dwell in..nor suffer the Russie..to people those partes.
1656 J. Bramhall Replic. to Bishop of Chalcedon iii. 153 Planting and ordering Schools for the education of youth.
1676 I. Mather Hist. King Philip's War (1862) 40 In three and twenty Towns, there were Indian Christian Churches Planted.
1709 M. Prior Carmen Seculare (new ed.) in Poems Several Occasions 160 Let him unite his Subjects Hearts, Planting Societies for peaceful Arts.
1727 D. Defoe Compl. Eng. Tradesman II. i. vi. 165 Planting Colonies in New Jersey, Pensilvania, and Carolina.
1878 G. F. Maclear Celts (1879) v. 88 They planted monasteries under abbot-bishops.
1892 Harper's Mag. Feb. 384/2 His plan was to plant a colony which should produce grain and horses and men for the old company, saving the importation of all three.
1985 Buzz Feb. 27/5 Shortly after that my husband and I were responsible for planting two churches and many people were saved.
1991 Classical Rev. 41 397 Apart perhaps from Mallus, colonies were not successfully planted on the coast of the Plain.
2004 Arizona Republic (Nexis) 21 Mar. 1 d The mountain lions of Sabino Canyon are a reminder that we only recently planted cities into a wild land.
b. transitive. To settle (a person) in a place; to establish (a person) as a settler or colonist. Cf. plantation n. 4. Now archaic and historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > [verb (transitive)] > establish (residence)
planteOE
to take up1523
settle1562
enter1603
fix1638
eOE Royal Psalter: Canticles iv. 17 Inducens plantas eos in montem hereditatis tue in preparato habitaculo tuo quod preparasti : ingelædende ðu plantast hy on munt yrfeweardnesse þinre on gegearwodre eardungstowe þinre þa ðu gegearwodest.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) 2 Kings vii. 10 I schal putten a place to my puple israel, & I schal plauntyn [L. plantabo] hym, & I schal dwelle with hym.
c1480 (a1400) St. Paul 452 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 42 Sut[h]faste hirdis, þat has þe playntit in hewine reme to be bettir and happliare.
a1500 Eng. Conquest Ireland (Rawl.) (1896) 25 He..oure lond-pepill will setten and Planten stydfastly in this londe, nowe and euer.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) 2 Sam. vii. 10 I wyll appoynte a place, and wyll plante them, that they maye remayne there.
a1568 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xlvii. 89 In ȝour tolbuth sic presouneris to plant.
1607 R. Tindall Let. 22 June in Capt. Smith's Wks. (1819) Introd. 38 Wee are safelye arryued and planted in this Contreye [Virginia].
1618 Carew Papers in Royal Engin. Jrnl. (1909) Aug. 126 To survey and make a return of the proceedings and performances of conditions of the undertakers, servitors and natives planted [in Armagh, etc.].
a1687 W. Petty Polit. Anat. Ireland (1691) 44 In some Counties, as in Kerry,..few English were ever planted.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 155 My being planted so well in the Brasils.
1870 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (ed. 2) I. ii. 11 Teutonic soldiers planted as colonists by the Roman government.
1969 Listener 31 July 152/1 Were loyal, thrifty volunteers from across the water to be ‘planted’ on mountain farms in Mourne or the Sperrins? Not at all. For them the best acres in Down or Armagh.
c. intransitive. To form a colony or colonies; to colonize, settle. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > furnishing with inhabitants > colonizing > colonize [verb (intransitive)]
to come ina1450
plant1555
colonize1593
people1596
settlea1682
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions i. iii. 36 Thei..made themselues cotages, and began to plante in plompes one by another.
a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 459 How King Gregoure with his Power passit in Fyffe..and plantit and pleneist as he passit.
1602 E. Hayes in J. Brereton Briefe Relation Discouerie Virginia 20 Which reasons, if they had beene foreseene of them that planted in the South part of Virginia..they had by this time beene a very flourishing State.
1625 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 203 If you Plant, where Sauages are, doe not onely entertaine them with Trifles, and Gingles; But vse them iustly, and gratiously.
1725 D. Defoe New Voy. round World i. 175 It seems, they are resolv'd to plant there.
d. transitive (reflexive). To establish or settle oneself as an inhabitant or colonist. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > [verb (reflexive)]
lenda1300
nesta1400
lodgec1400
inhabit1413
repair1509
settle1551
stay1558
plant1560
seat1603
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. xcviijv To sette and plante himselfe there.
1606 Haddington Burgh Rec. 3 Jan. in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) The multitude of beggars..dois..incress..be incoming of pure folkis..& takin up hows & planting thame selfis as inhabitants of the toun.
1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 152 The Zanclæans invited the remainder of the Milesians to come and plant themselves in Sicily.
1726 J. Barker Lining of Patch-work Screen sig. A4 How this Alteration came to pass, or when it began, I do not well know. But some say, it was in the Year when the first Colony of buggs planted themselves in England.
1871 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest IV. xviii. 230 Benedict, a monk of Auxerre, who planted himself in solitude among the wild forests by the Ouse.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 331/1 The first European colonists had planted themselves in Africa.
3. figurative.
a. transitive. To instil (an idea or feeling) in the mind, heart, etc.; to introduce, cause to spring up and grow (a quality, emotion, belief, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > instilling ideas > instil ideas [verb (transitive)]
planteOE
impressc1374
insinuate1529
instil1533
implanta1541
infuse1548
still1551
breathe1561
reinstila1711
imbibe1746
eOE King Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Otho) xxvii. 61 Hwæðer nu se anwald hæbbe þone þeaw ðæt he astificige unðeawas & awyr[t]walige of ricra monna [m]ode, [&] plantige ðær cræft[as on]?
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 123 (MED) Þe holy gost..bestrepþ þe zeue zennes uram þe herte and plonteþ [Fr. plante] and norisseþ zeue uirtues.
c1395 G. Chaucer Wife of Bath's Tale 1134 If gentillesse were planted naturelly Vnto a certeyn lynage doun the lyne..They mighte do no vileynye or vice.
1415 T. Hoccleve Addr. to Sir John Oldcastle l. 68 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 10 Plante in thyn herte a deep contricioun.
c1450 (?a1422) J. Lydgate Life Our Lady (Durh.) vi. 224 He may not fayle..His hert daunt so by a-temperaunce To voyde rancour and plant in sufferaunce.
a1538 T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset (1989) 10 Thes vertues..by the benefyte & powar of nature in hys hart are rotyd & plantyd.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. iii. 324 O then his lines would rauish sauage eares, And plant in Tyrants milde humilitie. View more context for this quotation
1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 309 If the history doth but once beginne to plant her image in our imagination.
1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 77. ⁋2 That noble Thirst of Fame and Reputation which is planted in the Hearts of all Men.
1762 O. Goldsmith Citizen of World II. 207 Though it cannot plant morals in the human breast, it cultivates them when there.
1878 G. F. Maclear Celts (1879) v. 78 It was his great aim to plant the truth in the minds of his hearers.
1961 J. Carew Last Barbarian 28 Don..seized upon and adopted ideas Tiberio planted in his awakening mind.
1993 W. Weaver tr. U. Eco Misreadings 30 What matters is that the seed of doubt is planted in his mind.
b. transitive. To establish (a principle, doctrine, practice, etc.); to cause to be accepted.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > command > command or bidding > command [verb (transitive)] > ordain, prescribe, or appoint
asetc885
teachc897
deemc900
ashapea1000
i-demeOE
setc1000
shiftc1000
stevenOE
redeOE
willOE
lookc1175
showc1175
stablea1300
devise1303
terminea1325
shapec1330
stightlea1375
determinec1384
judgea1387
sign1389
assize1393
statute1397
commanda1400
decree1399
yarka1400
writec1405
decreetc1425
rule1447
stallc1460
constitute1481
assignc1485
institute1485
prescribec1487
constitue1489
destinate1490
to lay down1493
make?a1513
call1523
plant1529
allot1532
stint1533
determ1535
appointa1538
destinec1540
prescrive1552
lot1560
fore-appoint1561
nominate1564
to set down1576
refer1590
sort1592
doom1594
fit1600
dictate1606
determinate1636
inordera1641
state1647
fix1660
direct1816
1529 T. More Dialogue Heresyes i, in Wks. 159/1 Now were..ye pointes of Christes faith..knowen, as I saye and planted before.
1529 T. More Dialogue Heresyes i, in Wks. 145/2 God..euer shall kepe in his church the right faith and righte beleue by the helpe of his owne hande that planted it.
1576 W. Lambarde Perambulation of Kent 146 At variaunce with that opinion, whiche Leland would plante.
1623 tr. A. Favyn Theater of Honour & Knight-hood ii. xiii. 208 The idolatry of the Syrians..was planted among the Ægyptians, who bemealed the Greeks therewith.
1726 D. Defoe Polit. Hist. Devil i. i. 6 [They] planted religion in those countries.
1857 D. Livingstone Missionary Trav. S. Afr. vi. 115 Christianity, as planted by modern missions.
1927 W. Cather Death comes for Archbishop i. ii. 30 The Faith planted by the Spanish friars and watered with their blood was not dead; it awaited only the toil of the husbandman.
1996 Jakarta Post (Nexis) 10 Nov. It is not possible that an ideology which has been planted, whether by force or not, and has grown for nearly half a century, will be eradicated thoroughly.
c. intransitive. To sprout, spring up. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > instilling ideas > instil ideas [verb (intransitive)]
plant1559
1559 D. Lindsay Complaynt 403 in Wks. (1931) I. 50 Polyce and peace begynnis to plant, That verteous men can no thyng want.
1580 Sir P. Sidney tr. Psalmes David xxv. vii Such as keep His covenaunt, And on His testimonys plant.
1594 Willobie his Auisa xlv. f. 43 No reason rules, where sorrowes plant.
d. transitive. To establish or set up (a person or thing) in a particular position or situation. Also: to appoint (a minister) to a vacant church or parish.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > fix or establish in position
i-set971
fastc1275
stablea1300
steada1300
pitchc1300
stablisha1325
ficchec1374
resta1393
seizea1400
locate1513
root1535
plant?a1562
room1567
repose1582
fix1638
haft1728
?a1562 G. Cavendish Life Wolsey (1959) 153 Sir ye do entend to delyuer them [the keys]..and to plant an other in my rome.
1577 tr. ‘F. de L'Isle’ Legendarie sig. Givv Therof ensued the order..established in the Kings council..wherein the Queene mother was planted vpright.
1597 W. Shakespeare Richard II v. i. 63 Thou which knowest the way To plant vnrightfull kings. View more context for this quotation
1622 E. Misselden Free Trade 97 They do what in them lyeth to plant their owne Draperies, and to supplant ours.
a1640 J. Fletcher & P. Massinger Spanish Curat ii. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. E4/2 He would entreat your care To plant me in the favour of some man.
c1650 J. Spalding Memorialls Trubles Scotl. & Eng. (1851) II. 4 The Lord Sinckler..dischargeit him, and plantit his awin lauchfull brother..in his place.
1843 C. J. Lever Jack Hinton 22 I now learnt..that the provost of the university himself had planted his man in the Phœnix.
1874 S. Cox Pilgrim Psalms i. 10 Planting himself on his habit of crying unto God in his distresses.
1886 A. Edgar Old Church Life 294 In those days, ministers were both planted and plucked up by the Church courts, as was deemed best for the interest of the Church at large.
1939 Fortune Oct. 39/3 Ever since Three Smart Girls everybody has loved Deanna, and her subsequent pictures have planted her firmly in the Mary-Pickford-America's-Sweetheart tradition.
4.
a. transitive. To place (a thing) firmly on the ground or any other body or surface; to set down firmly; to insert firmly; (of a person) to stand immovably; (Cookery) †to put (a thing) into or on to a dish, esp. as a decoration (obsolete). Also: to lay or set (a thing) down or out in a fixed position.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > place and make fast
plant1381
tight1382
affixc1448
pitch1533
pight1586
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > condition of being fast bound or firmly fixed > make fast [verb (transitive)] > fasten or fix
steek?c1335
stick1372
ficchec1374
plant1381
inficche1382
fix14..
graft1531
graff1536
stick1586
rivet1600
stay1627
rig1835
splice1847
fixate1885
1381 Diuersa Servicia in C. B. Hieatt & S. Butler Curye on Inglysch (1985) 79 For to make blank de syry..tak almandys & wet hem in water of sugur, & drye hem in a panne, and plante hem in þe mete.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Psalms xciii. 9 He that plauntide [L. plantavit] þe ere, shal he not heren?
?c1425 Recipe in Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. (Arun. 334) (1790) 455 Take a barre of golde foyle and another of sylver foyle and laye hom on Seint Andrews crosse wyse above the potage; then take sugre plate..and plante hom in the voide places betwene the barres.
c1450 in T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. (1888) 98 Make faire lowe coffyns and couche þis stuff there-in, And plonte pynes aboue.
?a1475 Noble Bk. Cookry in Middle Eng. Dict. at Plaunten Lay your tenche in a platter and plant hyme with blanched almondes.
1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. aviv Thai plantit doun ane pailyeoun.
a1540 (c1460) G. Hay tr. Bk. King Alexander 1239 [They] plantit doun thair tentis and palȝonis Syne plantis standartis.
1590 R. Hakluyt tr. T. de Bry True Pictures People Virginia in T. Hariot Briefe Rep. Virginia (new ed.) sig. C2v The place where they meet is a broade playne, abowt the which are planted in the grownde certayne posts.
1598 R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres iii. 36 Hee is to be taught how to plant his pike on the ground.
1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant iii. 26 The Banners which the Banians had planted on the top and highest Branches of it.
1707 J. Addison Rosamond ii. 22 Or this right Hand performs its part, And plants a Dagger in thy Heart.
1712 J. James tr. A.-J. Dézallier d'Argenville Theory & Pract. Gardening 89 In the..Point of Intersection, plant the Stake H.
1714 London Gaz. No. 5248/2 He planted the British Colours on the Castle.
1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan 152 Several byestanders took the hint, and walked off; but Peters!—he planted his foot, more peremptorily.
1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. (1856) xi. 82 To plant an ice-anchor, a hole is cut obliquely to the surface of the floe.
1874 F. C. Burnand My Time xv. 127 Planting her elbows on her knees.
1892 E. Reeves Homeward Bound 263 As the bull passes him, he has to plant these two darts at the same time in the back, and jump aside.
1912 ‘Saki’ Unbearable Bassington ii. 35 Comus busied himself with the exact position of a chair planted out in the middle of the floor.
1948 H. Miller Tropic of Capricorn 78 He had a habit, when he was well launched upon a subject, of stopping suddenly in the middle of the street and planting his heavy foot between mine so that I couldn't budge.
1996 Independent 9 Jan. 6/2 I first learnt to swim at home in my father's study On the piano-stool, planted on the middle of the rug.
b. transitive. To put or place (artillery) in position for discharging. †to plant a siege (obsolete): to lay siege. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > attack > action or state of siege or blockade > lay siege [verb (intransitive)]
to lay ensiege?a1500
to plant a siegea1500
to sit down1593
inleaguer1603
to set downa1616
to lie down1693
sit1802
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > management of artillery > operate (artillery) [verb (transitive)] > mount
planta1500
mount1515
brake1579
countermount1596
remount1627
a1500 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Nero) viii. l. 3818 Þe Kynge of Inglande..playntit a [seige] about Berwyk.
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. ccccjv Plantyng your ordenaunce here & there on your walles and Bulwarkes.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 748 The Capitaines..planted a strong siege, and enuironed it round about.
1604 E. Grimeston tr. True Hist. Siege Ostend 214 The siege being planted before Escluse.
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine i. i. 1 This cavill is not planted particularly against my indevours.
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iii. xviii. 140/2 Plant a peece, is to order it for it discharging that it may do service or execution.
1748 B. Robins & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson iii. viii. 382 Four swivel-guns..were planted at the mouth of each funnel.
1847 S. C. Reid Scouting Expeditions of McCulloch's Texas Rangers 151 The general impression prevailed that we were to escort Col. Duncan to plant his artillery.
1862 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia III. xiii. iii. 451 Cannon with case-shot planted themselves in all the thoroughfares.
1934 R. Graves I, Claudius xxxii. 464 The cavalry were on the wings and the siege-engines, mangonels, and catapults planted on sand-dunes.
1999 News & Observer (Raleigh, N. Carolina) (Nexis) 28 Mar. a1 Williams says he's tried everything to get rid of bears, even automated gas cannons planted in the fields.
c. transitive (reflexive). To place or station oneself; to take up a position; to stand firmly or immovably.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > position or situation > take up position [verb (reflexive)]
steek?c1335
stow1362
biga1425
plant?1544
pitch1687
adjust1700
station1740
locate1775
park1914
?1544 J. Heywood Foure PP sig. A.ivv I prayse your fortune and your wyt That can dyrecte you so discretely To plante you in this company.
1577 R. Holinshed Hist. Eng. 13/1 in Chron. I An yle..Most meet where thou mayst plant thy self with all thy route.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iii. i. 130 I will aduise you where to plant your selues, Acquaint you with the perfect Spy o'th' time, The moment on't. View more context for this quotation
1706 N. Rowe Ulysses iii. i. 1362 Remember well to plant thee at that Door.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 63. ¶4 The Officers planting themselves in a Line on the left Hand of each Column.
1754 Earl of Chatham Lett. to Nephew (1804) v. 34 Open your chest, place your head upright, and plant you well upon your legs.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe I. iii. 53 One grisly old wolf-dog alone..had planted himself close by the chair of state.
1871 L. Stephen Playground of Europe ii. 83 [They] persisted in planting themselves steadily in some safe nook.
1920 Times 1 July 7/5 A most reprehensible photographer planted himself and his camera, exactly in the line of fire.
1983 G. Savage Tournament 9 I nicked around the house and planted myself behind the mile-high pile of fruit cases standing there.
d. transitive. slang (now chiefly Australian). To hide, conceal (esp. stolen goods).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > a secret place, hiding place > put in secret place [verb (transitive)]
plant1610
secrete1749
stash1797
cache1805
lair1851
1610 S. Rid Martin Mark-all sig. Eiijv To Plant, to hide.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Plant, to lay, place, or hide.
1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue 264 Plant, to lay, place, or hide.
1794 D. Collins Acct. Eng. Colony New S. Wales (1798) I. 396 Three white and two check shirts, one pair of trousers, and one pair of stockings, were found... These must have been planted (to use the thief's phrase) a considerable time; for every mark or trace which could lead to a discovery of the owner was entirely effaced.
1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. (at cited word) To hide, or conceal any person..is termed planting him or it.
1827 P. Cunningham Two Years New S. Wales II. xxi. 60 ‘Pa! Bill has planted it’ (hid it).
1837 J. D. Lang Hist. Acct. New S. Wales II. 51 They..observed the robbers plant or conceal a quantity of the property, of which they had just plundered the cottage.
1865 Leaves from Diary Celebrated Burglar 133 'T would have been much safer to have planted it somewhere until this affair was over.
1902 Daily Chron. 29 Dec. 5/2 The plunder was ‘planted’ under the floor of a restaurant in Geelong.
1926 J. Black You can't Win x. 126 He..had planted his ‘dan’, caps, and fuse safely near the jail. He had picked out another spot near the jail where the money was to be planted.
1946 K. Tennant Lost Haven (1947) i. 18 You maybe think I didn't know you had them bottles planted in the swamp?
1976 Liverpool Echo 23 Nov. 1/5 He said ‘Come with me, I have planted a watch,’..and Gee said the watch was in the subway in Exchange Station.
1993 Security Managem. (Nexis) July 38 The dishonest divers planted their cache during the last dive before the boat was to leave the site.
e. transitive. To station (a person); esp. (colloquial) to post or infiltrate (a person) surreptitiously, usually as a spy or agent.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > place in assigned position
set971
stall1415
stell1488
fix1569
statea1590
stationize1598
post1609
station1685
plant1693
stance17..
possie1918
the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > secret observation, spying > spy on [verb (transitive)] > put in position
plant1764
1693 J. Evelyn tr. J. de La Quintinie Compl. Gard'ner ii. iv. x. 16 The Person must be dispos'd and planted near his Tree, in such a manner as to stand firm.
1706 J. Drake in Secret Mem. Earl of Leicester Pref. The guard of his own creatures, spies and dependants which he had planted about her.
1764 S. Foote Patron iii. 61 Intelligent people are planted, who will bring me..a faithful account of the process.
1777 R. Watson Hist. Reign Philip II I. viii. 234 He planted strong guards along the banks of the river.
1842 R. Cobden in J. Morley Life R. Cobden (1902) ix. 31/1 He was planted (to use a vulgar phrase) upon me by his party.
1892 I. Zangwill Big Bow Myst. 151 You plant one in my house to tell my secrets to Wimp, and you plant one in Wimp's house to tell Wimp's secrets to me.
1958 Listener 30 Oct. 704/3 The man was ‘planted’ as a nervous stammerer, but to be nervous is not necessarily to be a nitwit.
1978 S. Brill Teamsters i. 18 Government investigators..had planted an informant among organized-crime figures in California.
f. transitive. To devise as a fraudulent scheme; to handle (an affair, cards, etc.) in a fraudulent way. Cf. plant n.1 4c. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > defrauding or swindling > perpetrate (a swindle) [verb (transitive)]
nunclea1676
to cook up1686
plant1811
to work off1813
1811 Lexicon Balatronicum Books, cards to play with. To plant the books; to place the cards in the pack in an unfair manner.
1892 Daily News 27 May 3/4 Mr. Keay maintained that the affair was ‘planted’ between the two brothers, the Indian resident having..opportunities to carry out that object.
g. transitive. To deposit or introduce (a thing) surreptitiously for a specified purpose, esp. so as to incriminate or compromise a person; (Gold-mining) to place (gold dust, ore, etc.) in a mining claim in order to give a false impression of its productivity; = salt v.1 9 (now rare).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > for a particular purpose > for a surreptitious purpose
plant1853
society > leisure > the arts > literature > art or occupation of writer or author > be the author of or write (a work) [verb (transitive)] > present by literary treatment
beloukOE
induce1484
handle1531
introduce1559
manage1697
write1781
plant1948
1853 C. Reade Gold! iv. i. 17 Levi. This dust is from Birmingham, and neither Australian or natural. Rob. The man planted it for you.
1863 Cornhill Mag. May 640 The thieves, impatient of an officer more than commonly obnoxious, will conspire together, ‘plant something on him’, and sometimes succeed in getting him dismissed.
1865 J. H. A. Bone Petroleum & Petroleum Wells (ed. 2) 153 Frauds are not infrequently perpetrated by ‘planting’ oil in dry wells.
1886 P. Clarke ‘New Chum’ in Austral. (ed. 2) vi. 72 A ‘salted claim’, a ‘pit’ sold for a £10 note in which a nugget worth a few shillings had before been ‘planted’.
1930 Times Lit. Suppl. 1 May 373/1 The nephew..sought to clinch the available, and misleading, evidence by planting the victim's dental plate on the spot.
1948 A. Huxley Let. 16 Jan. (1969) 578 I have been trying to put this question to the general and specialized publics for the last year or two—even succeeding in planting it in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
1992 Business Mag. Summer 13/2 If you plan to take questions, plant one or two beforehand so there is no awkward silence when you call for them.
2004 Sun (Nexis) 9 July The jury then heard a taped interview with Robertson who claimed Allen told him to plant the drugs in Little's property or he would be sacked.
h. transitive. To place (a bomb) in a building, etc., esp. as a terrorist act.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > use of mines and explosives > use mines and explosives [verb (transitive)] > place (bomb) in building
plant1916
1916 ‘B. Cable’ Action Front 56 If we can plant a bomb or two in the right spot, it will bottle up any Germans working inside?
1937 R. K. Narayan Bachelor of Arts ii. 46 Did you try to plant a bomb..in his house?
1968 L. W. Robinson Assassin (1969) xvi. 199 He planted another bomb... Bomb squad says it's made of plastique.
1981 G. Clare Last Waltz in Vienna (1982) i. 42 They planted bombs in Jewish shops.
1990 S. Jamba Patriots (1992) xxv. 239 Now they had taken to planting bombs where internationalist comrades—Russians, East Germans and Cubans—were housed.
5.
a. transitive. To provide (a thing) with (also †full of) a number of usually scattered objects; to intersperse.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being scattered or dispersed > scatter [verb (transitive)] > scatter here and there at intervals > set (a surface) with things at intervals
plantc1450
studa1635
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 3146 Þe sepulture..Was of ane athill amatist..Plantid full of palmetres & many proud fowles.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) vi. l. 345 Thai playntyt thar feild with tentis and pailȝonis.
a1540 (c1460) G. Hay tr. Bk. King Alexander 1859 His scheild was all plantit with diamantis.
1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus ii. iii. 62 Thy temples should be planted presentlie, With hornes. View more context for this quotation
1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 113 The Portugall..built a strong castle here, planted it with seventeene cannon..and a thousand musquets.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 160. ¶8 A vast Ocean planted with innumerable Islands.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. v. 556 A battery was planted with some small guns taken from the ships.
1998 K. Sampson Extra Time 46 It's a long, long walk from the city centre out to Elland Road and it's not a walk which is planted with boulevards and inviting hostelries.
b. transitive. To colonize or settle (a place) with inhabitants; (also) to stock (a place) with animals. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > furnishing with inhabitants > colonizing > colonize (a place) [verb (transitive)]
inhabit1390
planta1513
colonizea1626
colony1649
seat1684
settle1702
colonialize1971
a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1926) I. 76 The scripture sais that God him self plauntit it [sc. Paradise]: the man was..put in it.
a1538 A. Abell Roit or Quheill of Tyme f. 39v, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) He plantit Armonik with Britonis & callit it Les Britane.
1585 R. Grenville Let. 29 Oct. in A. L. Rowse Sir Richard Grenville of Revenge (1937) (modernized text) 222 I have possessed and peopled the same to her Majesty's use, and planted it with such cattle and beasts as are fit and necessary for manuring the Country.
c1608 in Buccleuch MSS (Hist. MSS Comm.) (1899) I. 75 The necessity of planting Leitrim with the greater part of British.
a1676 M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind (1677) ii. vii. 195 He..grants that Iceland, and some part of Groenland were visited and planted by Ericus Ruffus.
1762 Gentleman's Mag. Mar. 101/2 We cannot spare people to plant those islands.
1777 Farmer's Mag. Apr. 83 The original idea of planting Nova Scotia was not indeed so much upon a plan of agriculture, as defence.
1869 G. Rawlinson Man. Anc. Hist. 31 Planted it [sc. Media] with cities.
1904 Dundee Advertiser 5 July 6/3 The other 23 States being..thinly ‘planted’ with horned animals.
c. transitive. Scottish. To provide (a vacant church or parish) with a minister. Obsolete (historical in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > sacrament > order > induction > induct [verb (transitive)]
inductc1380
institutec1475
pulpit1529
plant1563
settle1719
install1788
locate1798
1563 Act Gen. Assembly Church of Scotl. 25 June Commissions [are]..to be given to the bishops of Galloway..and Catnes..to plant kirks..within their owne bounds.
1574 in J. Row Hist. Kirk Scotl. (1842) 50 That vackand Kirks be planted, and stipends assigned to them.
1583 P. Stubbes Second Pt. Anat. Abuses sig. M3v Most churches are planted and fraught with single reading ministers.
1646 in W. Cramond Extracts Rec. Synod of Moray (1906) 81 That that kirk might be planted with ane able man.
1721 R. Wodrow Hist. Sufferings Church of Scotl. I. iii. 119 The Bishops are appointed to plant the Kirks which have vaiked since the Year 1637.
1743 Ayr Presb. Reg. MS 23 Nov. The Moderator is appointed to write letters to the several heretors..anent their being at due pains to have the paroch planted with a minister.
1845 Statist. Acct. I. 561 After the Reformation, it was long in being planted, in consequence, it is believed, of the benefice being appropriated by the crown.
d. transitive. To stock or supply (a piece of land, a plot, etc.) with a plant or plants. Frequently with with, to, up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > planting > plant plants [verb (transitive)] > plant ground
plant1585
1585 T. Washington tr. N. de Nicolay Nauigations Turkie i. xvi. 17 b The earth is carried into it and planted with [Fr. peuplé de] all sorts of excellent fruteful trees.
1600 J. Pory tr. J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. viii. 303 The citie of Bochin..is now planted with date-trees.
1648 S. Danforth Almanack 12 The prudent Husband-men are pleas'd to spare No work or paines, no labour, cost or care, A nursery to plant, with tender sprigs, Young shoots & sprouts, small branches, slips & twigs.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iv, in tr. Virgil Wks. 127 With wild Thyme and Sav'ry, plant the Plain. View more context for this quotation
1712 J. Norris Profitable Advice for Rich & Poor 42 We account Three or Four Years sufficient to Plant (as we call it) one piece of Land, before we lay it out for Grass, and Clear more, and seldom desire to Plant the same again, but let it lie for Pasture for Sheep and Calves.
1799 T. R. Malthus Diary 16 July (1966) 159 There are many grounds about the town planted to potatoes.
1839 C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby ii. 7 It is not supposed that they were ever planted, but rather that they are pieces of unreclaimed land, with the withered vegetation of the original brick-field.
1850 T. S. Arthur Golden Grains from Life's Harvest 108 Two of their fields, lying side by side, were one season, both planted in corn.
1922 W. H. Ukers All about Coffee xx. 215 Of this area, 110,903 acres were planted with robusta, 15,314 acres with arabica.
1928 R. S. Troup Silvicultural Syst. vii. 95 The regeneration of an area generally begins with the felling of a narrow clear strip along the northern edge of the wood in a good seed-year, and where there is any risk of a heavy growth of grass this strip is at once planted up.
1976 National Observer (U.S.) 12 June 9/1 Grapevines are now found..creeping into fields once planted to pears and apples.
1991 Gardener Jan. 20/3 I also plant a clay pot with basil.
6. transitive. To place, situate, or locate (a town, house, etc.). Also figurative. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > situate
setc950
markc1400
situate?a1425
site?c1425
plant1558
seat1603
emplacea1627
position1817
to set down1827
spot1891
1558 Act 1 Eliz. c. 14 §4 Faire large townes..as well planted for cloth making as the sayd towne of Goddelmine or better.
1576 A. Fleming tr. Cicero in Panoplie Epist. 110 In them I plant my chiefest pleasure.
1610 R. Vaughan Most Approved Water-workes P3 To plant an vnder~shot-mil vpon a Riuer.
1624 H. Wotton Elements Archit. in Reliquiæ Wottonianæ (1651) 205 A Town..finely built, but foolishly planted.
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine i. ii. 5 Some perchance will place their scorn, where they ought to plant their wonder.
1856 A. P. Stanley Sinai & Palestine (1858) iv. 226 If Neby-Samwil be the high place of Gibeon, then Mizpeh which Dr. Robinson planted there, must be sought elsewhere.
1985 L. Choyce Avalanche Ocean (1987) i. vii. 36 Swale was his word for the notch between the two hills where my outhouse had been planted.
2004 News-Sentinel (Fort Wayne, Indiana) (Nexis) 16 July Fertil talked about the long drive to Wheeling, a steel-mill town planted on the Ohio River.
7. transitive. slang (chiefly U.S.). To bury (a dead person).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > burial > bury or entomb [verb (transitive)]
bedelveOE
begraveOE
burya1000
beburyc1000
bifel-ec1000
layc1000
to fall, lull, lay (bring obs.) asleepOE
tombc1275
gravec1300
inter1303
rekec1330
to lap in leadc1340
to lay to rest, abed, to bed1340
lie1387
to louk in clay (lead, etc.)?a1400
to lay lowa1425
earthc1450
sepulture1490
to put awaya1500
tyrea1500
mould1530
to graith in the grave1535
ingrave1535
intumulate1535
sepult1544
intumil?c1550
yird1562
shrinea1566
infera1575
entomb1576
sepelite1577
shroud1577
funeral1578
to load with earth1578
delve1587
to lay up1591
sepulchrize1595
pit-hole1607
infuneral1610
mool1610
inhumate1612
inurna1616
inhume1616
pit1621
tumulate1623
sepulchrea1626
turf1628
underlay1639
urna1657
to lay to sleep, asleep1701
envaulta1745
plant1785
ensepulchre1820
sheugh1839
to put under1879
to lay away1885
1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique iii. xlv. 513 This is it which some vtter in a prouerbe: That he that will plant his father must cut off his head.
1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue 264 Plant,..to bury: as, He was planted by the parson.
1793 S. A. Mathews Lying Hero 34 But what benefit could arise from killing and planting a negro; if after a negro was thus killed and planted, he would spring up like a tree.
1855 Harper's Mag. Dec. 37/1 Let it [sc. yellow fever] catch hold of a crowd of ‘Johnny come latelys’, and it plants them at once.
1866 ‘M. Twain’ Lett. from Hawaii (1967) 242 It's about the orneryest thing for a monument I've ever struck yet... If I was planted under it, I'd highst it.
1888 in J. S. Farmer Americanisms (1889) 244/2 We..planted Uncle George in ship-shape and proper manner. We wasn't goin' to have any highfalutin' flamdoodle business over him.
1927 C. A. W. Monckton Some Exper. New Guinea Resident Magistr. 2nd Ser. i. 16 There's Alligator Jack and Red Bill..planted here, and Gawd, 'E knows whether they have rested easy.
1967 C. Rougvie When Johnny Died iii. 66 It was raining when we planted him, and I thought he'd get out of his coffin.
1974 R. Jeffries Mistakenly in Mallorca xv. 143 The funeral must be fixed up at once. Where did non-Catholics get planted?
1990 C. Allen Savage Wars of Peace (1991) 20 I carried Ben on my shoulders when we buried him and I remember the flies round his coffin... We planted him at eight o'clock in the evening.
8. transitive. To abandon (a person); to terminate a relationship. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > reverse or abandon one's purpose or intention [verb (transitive)] > desert or deny a person
forsakea1300
refusec1350
nitec1390
swerve1390
relinquish1472
relinque1483
renounce1582
to fling off1587
derelicta1631
relapse1633
plant1743
to throw over1835
chuck up (the sponge)1878
ditch1899
ruck1903
to run out on1912
to walk out1921
squib1938
1743 H. Mann Let. 2 Apr. in H. Walpole Corr. (1954) XVIII. 198 Two strange new English creatures came to be carried to the concert. I planted them the moment I had introduced them.
1819 Ld. Byron Let. 6 Apr. (1976) VI. 107 If She should plant me..never could I show my face on the Piazza.
1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto III iv. 5 But one thing's pretty sure: a woman planted—(Unless at once she plunge for life in prayers)—After a decent time must be gallanted.
1852 C. W. Hoskyns Talpa 18 Here I was, fairly planted, at the first onset.
1858 T. J. Hogg Life Shelley II. 399 For some six years..he makes her a most exemplary husband; and then, all at once, he plants her; plants her at once and for ever.
1940 L. Hart Plant you Now, Dig you Later in L. Hart & R. Kimball Compl. Lyrics Lorenz Hart (1976) 274/2 Where's the check? Get me the waiter. Plant you now, dig you later. I'm on my way.
9.
a. transitive. colloquial. To land (a blow, a kick, etc.). Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > strike [verb (transitive)] > deal or give (a stroke or blow) > accurately or effectively
fastenc1225
fastc1330
to send homea1627
to fetch overa1640
plant1808
land1886
1808 Sporting Mag. 32 76 Gully made play, and planted two other blows on his adversary's head.
1829 F. Marryat Naval Officer III. vii. 180 I planted a stomacher in his fifth button.
1847 H. Miller First Impressions Eng. xix. 373 He finds every Highlander..adroit of fence, in planting upon him as many queries as can possibly be thrust in.
1882 R. L. Stevenson New Arabian Nights I. 146 The thin tones of Lady Vandeleur planting icy repartees at every opening.
1883 F. M. Peard Contradictions xxii You know how to plant a straight blow just where it is most telling.
1906 Independent (N. Y.) 19 Apr. 911 I planted him one in the jaw that must have taught him manners.
1953 J. Wain Hurry on Down i. 4 He had dwelt lovingly on the kick he would plant, scientifically and deliberately, in the dog's mouth as it yelped at him.
1992 Boxing News 11 Sept. 7/2 Goodwin walked out at the sound of the first bell, waved his right hand then planted it on McNess' chin.
b. transitive. To place (a kiss) on a part of a person's face or body.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [verb (transitive)] > imprint (a kiss)
fasten1613
plant1867
1867 J. G. Holland Kathrina 143 ‘And this!’ I said Planting a kiss upon each lovely cheek Of my betrothed, that straightway bloomed with rose.
1906 J. Galsworthy Man of Prop. i. ix. 122 Moved by some inexplicable desire to assert his proprietorship, he rose from his chair and planted a kiss on his wife's shoulder.
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §355/7 Kiss,..Plant a smacker.
1986 Times 16 June 5/4 About 100 people applauded and cheered his return and women planted kisses on his cheek.
2004 S. Wales Echo (Nexis) 1 June 12 Stuart began by planting kisses on Michelle's neck.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1eOEn.2a1382n.31624v.eOE
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