sow1 /səʊ $ soʊ/ ●●○ verb (past tensepstsowed, past participleppsown /səʊn $ soʊn/ or sowed) → sew, soh, so
1[intransitiveI, transitiveT]DLGTA to plant or scatterseeds on a piece of ground 播(种)
Sow the seeds in late March.
三月底播种。
sow something with something
These fields used to be sown with oats.
这些地里过去种的是燕麦。
2CAUSE[transitiveT] to do something that will cause a bad situation in the future 散布,激起〔会在将来产生不良影响的事物〕
repressive laws that are sowing the seeds of future conflicts
给未来的冲突播下种子的高压法规
sow doubt/confusion/dissatisfaction etc
an attempt to sow doubt among the jury members
让陪审团成员产生怀疑的企图
3.sow your wild oatsif a man sows his wildoats, he has sex with many different women, especially when he is young 〔尤指男子年轻时〕生活放荡,滥交
—sower noun [countableC]
Examples from the Corpus
sow• But even before Edward's time, seeds of dissension had been sown.• They became farmers in the fields of stars; they sowed, and sometimes they reaped.• In August, sow early carrots in a coldframe or greenhouse and keep covered during winter for pulling as needed.• Slowervarietiesmaturing in two months or more need to be sown in July to ensure a lengthyOctoberharvest.• Seeds of these plants are sown in moistsand.• If you want an early crop, you should sow in September.• For several months after seed is sown, nothing can be seen to show that there will be a harvest.• The ground was still too waterlogged for sowingrice.• Sow the seeds in rows about 20 centimetres apart.• They think they're wooing the masses; instead they're sowing the seeds of their comeuppance.• Of what may come hereafter For men who sow to reap.• Other plants sown with the reeds absorbheavymetals and harmful bacteria.
sow something with something• One year they decided to sow the field withbarley instead.