0 present participle of seed
1 to produce seeds:
3 to make a player a seed:
4 to spread substances such as certain chemicals in clouds, in order to try to make them produce rain, or more rain:
They claimed to produce on average 30 percent more rain from the individual clouds they seeded.
The city of Shanghai is even considering seeding clouds on the summer's hottest days to induce cooling rain showers.
Policy-makers believe there will be more pressure to seed the clouds, but they want proof that it works and that there won't be harmful results.
Key examples are systems combining no-till seeding, crop-rotations including legumes, plus maintenance of continuous crop-residue cover to the soil.
Very rapidly after seeding, neurons exhibit a profuse neuritic outgrowth.
The target planet must also at least be habitable to allow seeding by a single organism.
Seeding blood with extremely low parasite concentrations would be an unreliable procedure.
Designs and comparative performances - judged by seedling-response - of seeding equipment for zerotillage farming are described.