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seeds

/siːdz/

The word 'seeds' is the plural form of 'seed'. As a countable noun, it refers to the small reproductive units of plants. It can also be used metaphorically to refer to the origin or beginning of something abstract, like an idea or a problem. When used in a biological context referring to male reproductive cells, it is often used in the plural form ('seeds') but can sometimes be used as an uncountable noun in a general sense.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon during a high-stakes board meeting.
Mr. Sterling

Victoria, we must sow the seeds of disruption today.

Mr. Sterling
Victoria
Victoria

I'm just trying to get this budget signed off before we go belly up.

💡
Mr. Sterling uses 'seeds' as a metaphor for the origin of a new idea (Definition 2), while Victoria responds with the idiom 'go belly up', meaning to go bankrupt, highlighting their clash between philosophical abstraction and harsh corporate reality.

Meanings

noun

The small, hard part of a plant from which a new plant can grow.

"Plant these seeds in spring."

noun

The basic element or origin of something.

"The seeds of doubt were sown."

noun

A small, oval reproductive cell that is the chief means of the propagation of a species.

"The seeds of a new generation."

noun

A small, solid particle, especially of a drug or a component in a chemical process.

"A few seeds of the drug."

noun

A person's genetic material, especially sperm.

"He gave his seeds to the bank."

Collocations & Compounds

plant seeds

To put seeds in the ground to grow.

We will plant seeds in the spring.

flower seeds

Seeds that grow into flowering plants.

I bought some colorful flower seeds.

pumpkin seeds

The edible seeds of a pumpkin.

Roasted pumpkin seeds are a great snack.

sunflower seeds

The edible seeds of a sunflower.

Birds love sunflower seeds.

hemp seeds

The seeds of the hemp plant, used as food.

Add hemp seeds to your morning smoothie.

Idioms & Sayings

sow your wild oats

To enjoy yourself by having many different, exciting experiences, especially sexual ones, when you are young.

He went to college to sow his wild oats.

the seeds of something

The origin or cause of a particular situation or feeling.

This event planted the seeds of future conflict.

scatter seeds

To spread ideas or influence widely, often without a specific target.

The missionaries scattered seeds of faith across the land.

Etymology

The word 'seeds' comes from the Old English word 'sǣd', which itself has Germanic roots, related to words in Old Norse ('sað') and Dutch ('zaad'). The Proto-Germanic root is 'sadą-'. This root is also found in other Indo-European languages, such as Latin 'serere' (to sow) and Greek 'sperma' (seed, semen), highlighting a common ancient linguistic origin for the concept of propagation and origin.

Related Words

Last Updated: May 22, 2026Report an Error