planting


Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
plant/plɑːnt/
noun
  • 1 a living organism of the kind exemplified by trees, shrubs, grasses, ferns, and mosses, typically growing in a permanent site, absorbing water and inorganic substances through the roots, and synthesizing nutrients in the leaves by photosynthesis using the green pigment chlorophyll.

    ■ a small plant, as distinct from a shrub or tree.

  • 2 a place where an industrial or manufacturing process takes place.

    ■ machinery used in an industrial or manufacturing process.

  • 3 a person placed in a group as a spy or informer.

    ■ a thing put among someone's belongings to incriminate or discredit them.

  • 4 Snooker a shot in which the cue ball is made to strike one of two touching or nearly touching balls with the result that the second is potted.
verb
  • 1 place (a seed, bulb, or plant) in the ground so that it can grow.

    ■ (plant something out) place a plant in the ground out of doors.

  • 2 place or fix in a specified position.

    ■ secretly place (a bomb).

    ■ stock a river or lake with (young fish, spawn, oysters, etc.).

  • 3 establish (an idea) in someone's mind.
  • 4 found or establish (a colony or community).
  • 5 put or hide (something) among someone's belongings as a plant.

    ■ send (someone) to join a group to act as a spy or informer.

– derivatives
plantable adjective,
plantlet noun,
plant-like adjective.
– origin OE plante ‘seedling’, plantian (v.), from L. planta ‘sprout, cutting’ (later influenced by Fr. plante) and plantare ‘plant, fix in place’.
'planting' also found in these Oxford entries:

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