sprang
For the verb: "to spring"
| Simple Past: | sprang |
| Past Participle: | sprung |
sprang spring
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
sprang/spraŋ/
past of spring.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
spring/sprɪŋ/
▶verb (past sprang or chiefly N. Amer. sprung; past part. sprung)
- 1 move suddenly or rapidly upwards or forwards.
■ cause (a game bird) to rise from cover.
- 2 move suddenly by or as if by the action of a spring.
- 3 operate or cause to operate by means of a spring mechanism.
- 4 (spring from) originate or appear from.
■ (spring up) suddenly develop or appear.
■ (spring something on) present something suddenly or unexpectedly to.
- 5 informal bring about the escape or release of (a prisoner).
- 6 (usu. as adj. sprung) provide (a vehicle or item of furniture) with springs.
- 7 (of wood) become warped or split.
- 8 (spring for) N. Amer. informal pay for.
- 1 the season after winter and before summer, in which vegetation begins to appear.
■ Astronomy the period from the vernal equinox to the summer solstice.
- 2 an elastic device, typically a helical metal coil, that can be pressed or pulled but returns to its former shape when released.
■ elastic quality.
- 3 a sudden jump upwards or forwards.
- 4 a place where water wells up from an underground source.
- 5 an upward curvature of a ship's deck planking from the horizontal.
■ a split in a wooden plank or spar under strain.
- 6 Nautical a hawser laid out from a ship's bow or stern and secured to a fixed point in order to prevent movement or assist manoeuvring.
– phrases
spring a leak (of a boat or container) develop a leak.
spring a leak (of a boat or container) develop a leak.
– derivatives
springless adjective,
springlet noun (literary),
springlike adjective.
springless adjective,
springlet noun (literary),
springlike adjective.
– origin OE spring (n.), springan (v.), of Gmc origin.
'sprang' also found in these Oxford entries:

