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Growing   /grˈoʊɪŋ/   Listen
adjective
growing  adj.  
1.
Increasing in intensity of some quality. (prenominal)
Synonyms: increasing(prenominal), incremental.
2.
Increasing in size or amount; as, her growing popularity.
3.
Increasing in size and maturity; of living things normally healthy and not fully matured.
Synonyms: flourishing, thriving.
4.
P. pr. of grow (definition 3); as, growing plants.



verb
Grow  v. t.  (past grew; past part. grown ; pres. part. growing)  To cause to grow; to cultivate; to produce; as, to grow a crop; to grow wheat, hops, or tobacco.
Synonyms: To raise; to cultivate. See Raise, v. t., 3.



Grow  v. i.  (past grew; past part. grown ; pres. part. growing)  
1.
To increase in size by a natural and organic process; to increase in bulk by the gradual assimilation of new matter into the living organism; said of animals and vegetables and their organs.
2.
To increase in any way; to become larger and stronger; to be augmented; to advance; to extend; to wax; to accrue. "Winter began to grow fast on." "Even just the sum that I do owe to you Is growing to me by Antipholus."
3.
To spring up and come to maturity in a natural way; to be produced by vegetation; to thrive; to flourish; as, rice grows in warm countries. "Where law faileth, error groweth."
4.
To pass from one state to another; to result as an effect from a cause; to become; as, to grow pale. "For his mind Had grown Suspicion's sanctuary."
5.
To become attached or fixed; to adhere. "Our knees shall kneel till to the ground they grow."
Growing cell, or Growing slide, a device for preserving alive a minute object in water continually renewed, in a manner to permit its growth to be watched under the microscope.
Grown over, covered with a growth.
To grow out of, to issue from, as plants from the soil, or as a branch from the main stem; to result from. "These wars have grown out of commercial considerations."
To grow up, to arrive at full stature or maturity; as, grown up children.
To grow together, to close and adhere; to become united by growth, as flesh or the bark of a tree severed.
Synonyms: To become; increase; enlarge; augment; improve; expand; extend.



noun
growing  n.  The sequence of events involved in the development of an organism.
Synonyms: growth, maturation, development, ontogeny, ontogenesis.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Growing" Quotes from Famous Books



... been growing up and growing old, a bountiful Providence had granted a new poet to this earth. He, likewise, was a native of the valley, but had spent the greater part of his life at a distance from that romantic region, pouring out his sweet music amid the bustle ...
— Famous Stories Every Child Should Know • Various

... in wave upon frozen wave like water piled ragged by some terrific gale, with the tops of the waters torn and tossed and then frozen forever in that position, like a fantastic and gargantuan mask of dreaming terror. It overawed the heart of Mary Brown to look up to them, but there was growing in her a new impulse of friendly understanding with all this scalped, bald region of rocks, as if in entering the valley she had passed through the gate which closes out the gentler world, and now she was admitted as a denizen ...
— Riders of the Silences • John Frederick

... of the dramatic was sinking, the wave of the lyric was growing in force and rising in height. Especially as regards religious poetry we are as yet only approaching the lyrical jubilee. Fact and faith, self-consciousness and metaphysics, all are needful to the lyric of love. Modesty and art find their grandest, simplest labour ...
— England's Antiphon • George MacDonald

... of that 100 years saw the dawn of that system of free government which has grown and flourished, and which, if the men of the present day be the worthy descendants of Eliott and Pym, and Hampden and Milton, will go on growing as long as this realm lasts. Within that time, one of the strangest phenomena which I think I may say any nation has ever manifested arose to its height and fell—I mean that strange and altogether marvellous phenomenon, English Puritanism. Within that ...
— William Harvey And The Discovery Of The Circulation Of The Blood • Thomas H. Huxley

... growing alarming,' reasoned Mr. Pickwick with himself. 'I can't allow things to go on in this way. By the self-possession of that lady, it is clear to me that I must have come into the wrong room. If I call out she'll alarm the house; but if I remain ...
— The Pickwick Papers • Charles Dickens


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