reseed

[ UK /ɹɪsˈiːd/ ]
[ US /ɹiˈsid/ ]
VERB
  1. maintain by seeding without human intervention
    Some plants reseed themselves indefinitely
  2. seed again or anew
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How To Use reseed In A Sentence

  • The best time to establish a new lawn from seed is in the fall, but many homeowners will need to reseed patches of lawn that have been damaged during the winter.
  • However, I did read somewhere that you can rip up the dead grass, with a metal rake, and reseed.
  • The days which reseeded into the past, one time or another, was hosted by Catholic nuns. THE VIRGINS OF MORELIA?
  • That left behind a collagen matrix — the protein fibers that hold groups of cells together and help give organs their overall shape — which they then reseeded with heart cells from a newborn rat. Science Is Nifty
  • To reseed or not to reseed: Speaking of the Seahawks' upset, does that make you more inclined to favor reseeding teams? NFL wild-card weekend live: Ravens-Chiefs, Packers-Eagles
  • If the weather is mild, you can reseed bare patches; otherwise, wait until the end of the month. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hi Dave, beware the autumn clem, it can reseed terribly and grows quite large. Clems, Roses and Good Things Coming To An End « Fairegarden
  • And the wonderfully fragrant rucola is almost as lush, both having somehow reseeded themselves in defiance of my neglect. Archive 2008-05-01
  • The Shangri-La myth of a land that could reseed human civilization after the planet was destroyed by war struck a chord in the 1930s, when development seemed geared only toward industrial destruction. When a Billion Chinese Jump
  • Do not plough, whether in tillage or if reseeding grassland.
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