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grower    音标拼音: [gr'oɚ]
n. 种植者,生长物

种植者,生长物

grower
n 1: someone concerned with the science or art or business of
cultivating the soil [synonym: {agriculturist},
{agriculturalist}, {cultivator}, {grower}, {raiser}]

Grower \Grow"er\, n.
One who grows or produces; as, a grower of corn; also, that
which grows or increases; as, a vine may be a rank or a slow
grower.
[1913 Webster]

93 Moby Thesaurus words for "grower":
Bauer, agriculturalist, agriculturist, agrologist, agronomist,
ancestors, apprentice, architect, artificer, artist, author,
begetter, beginner, builder, coffee-planter,
collective farm worker, conceiver, constructor, craftsman, creator,
crofter, cropper, cultivator, designer, deviser, dirt farmer,
discoverer, dry farmer, effector, engenderer, engineer, executor,
executrix, farm laborer, farmer, farmhand, father, founder,
generator, gentleman farmer, granger, harvester, harvestman,
haymaker, husbandman, inaugurator, industrialist, initiator,
instigator, institutor, introducer, inventor, journeyman,
kibbutznik, kolkhoznik, kulak, maker, manufacturer, master,
master craftsman, mother, muzhik, organizer, originator,
past master, peasant, peasant holder, picker, planner, planter,
plowboy, plowman, precursor, prime mover, producer, raiser,
rancher, ranchman, realizer, reaper, rustic, shaper, sharecropper,
sire, smith, sower, tea-planter, tenant farmer, tiller,
tree farmer, truck farmer, wright, yeoman


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Grower查看 Grower 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
Grower查看 Grower 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
Grower查看 Grower 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • word meaning - Difference between idiot and dummy? - English . . .
    Although idiot and dummy do commonly have the same meaning, the use of idiot in this joking phrase draws particular attention to a specific sense of idiot From Merriam-Webster's definition of idiot: 1 : a foolish or stupid person It's the use of foolish in the definition that's relevant From Merriam-Webster's definition of dummy: 1 c : a
  • grammar - Can the word THIS be a dummy subject? For example: This is . . .
    5 I think the "dummy subject"you are talking about is that which is known as an expletive subject A good example is It is raining In the text you quote I don't believe this is used in quite the same way Even though there is no this at whom one could point, it could refer to a person named in the letter from David Hutton
  • grammar - formal subject real subject in Its obvious where our . . .
    The grammatical subject is the dummy pronoun "It" The expression "where our interest lies" is a subordinate content clause, which is called by some grammars (e g CGEL) as the "extraposed subject" An extraposed subject is NOT a kind of subject--it is merely an element in extraposed position
  • It will be awesome interesting nice, etc. if you can join us. - is it . . .
    It's an anticipatory "it", as "it" could be replaced with "you joining us" It's not a dummy as it does actually refer to something specific The second is the same, although calling it anticipatory seems a bit odd Both could be rewritten as "You joining us would be awesome" By the way, "would" is better than "will" in both cases "Will" sounds wrong with "if"
  • sentence construction - It is + adjective + doing - English Language . . .
    The it in your sentences is a dummy subject In English, you can build sentences with dummy subjects such as "it" and "there" in place of an ordinary subject noun
  • There is some or There are some- which is correct?
    Initial There's is OK before anything When it's at the beginning of the sentence, it's just a dummy, with no meaning or plural, and it's reified into one word before anything plural can happen in the sentence By the time the real subject comes along, plural or not, the listener will've forgotten how the sentence started Since it didn't start with anything meaningful except the dummy
  • It - Preparatory subject - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    The "it" does not represent a semantic argument and cannot be replaced by any other noun phrase There is no question of dummy "it" being a preparatory element, since the elements that follow it do not give the meaning if "it" "It" is, then, just a dummy element serving the syntactic purpose of filling the obligatory subject position
  • Subject and predicate in sentences starting with there?
    Here, it says that the real subject is "a book and a pen" but I know that "there" can also be called a "dummy subject" What should be the most suitable subject and predicate in this context?
  • How far is it from here? VS How far is it from here to there?
    1 Dummy pronoun A dummy pronoun, also called an expletive pronoun or pleonastic pronoun, is a pronoun used for syntax without explicit meaning - wikipedia You ask whether "to there" is required (or alternatively, whether it is a mistake) in the question: How far is it from here (to there)?





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