oversow

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English

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Etymology

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From Old English ofersāwan, from ofer- sāwan. Equivalent to over-sow.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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oversow (third-person singular simple present oversows, present participle oversowing, simple past oversowed, past participle oversown or oversowed)

  1. To sow (seed) where something has already been sown.
    Synonym: overseed
    • 1565, William Fulke, William Allen, chapter XIII, in Two Treatises Written against the Papistes[1], page 409:
      The which contrary corrupt seede of false doctrine we right well know came of the sayd aduersary, because it was long after ouersowen []
    • 1582, Douay-Rheims Bible, Matthew 13:25[2]:
      But vvhen men vvere a ſleepe, his enemy came and ouerſovved cockle among the vvheate, and vvent his vvay.
    • 1996, C. P. Peacock, Improving Goat Production in the Tropics, →ISBN, page 115:
      [] it is possible to oversow the area with improved forages. [] Vigorous species must be used to oversow the area []
  2. To sow too much seed upon.
    Hypernym: overplant

References

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