seed

/siːd/ (bre, ipa) · /siːd/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈsēd/ (ame, mw)

seed — 名詞

  • seedsingular
  • seedsplural

1. a tiny, often hard object that forms inside a plant and can be placed in soil to

1.名詞B2
釋義

種子

植物繁殖用的小顆粒

a tiny, often hard object that forms inside a plant and can be placed in soil to grow a new plant

例句

Ryan planted a sunflower seed in a small pot on the kitchen window.

Ryan 在廚房的窗台上將一顆向日葵種子種在小花盆裡。

The farmer saved the best seeds from this year's crop for next spring.

農夫將今年收成中最好的種子留到明年春天使用。

countable: seeds from [crop]

同義詞
  • pip

    refers specifically to the small hard seed found in fruit such as apples or oranges

  • kernel

    refers to the softer edible part inside a hard shell, especially of grains or nuts

  • grain

    refers to a small, hard seed of cereal plants like wheat or rice

用法筆記

Used as a countable noun (one seed, many seeds) and also as uncountable when referring to seeds as a general substance — for example, 'birdseed' or 'seed can be stored for years in a dry place.'

常見錯誤

I put a seed in the ground.
I planted a seed in the ground.
💡The typical verb with 'seed' (the noun) is 'plant' or 'sow', not 'put'.

2. the fluid produced by male animals and humans that carries sperm and is involved

2.名詞C1
釋義

精液

雄性生殖液體

the fluid produced by male animals and humans that carries sperm and is involved in reproduction

例句

The doctor examined a sample of the patient's seed under a microscope.

醫生在顯微鏡下檢查病人的精液樣本。

uncountable: seed as biological fluid

Researchers studied how temperature changes affect seed quality in mammals.

研究人員研究了溫度變化如何影響哺乳動物的精液品質。

同義詞
  • semen

    the standard modern term for this biological fluid

  • sperm

    refers to the individual reproductive cells within the fluid, not the fluid itself

用法筆記

Clinical or biological register. In everyday conversation, the word 'semen' is far more common than 'seed' for this meaning.

3. the stage when an edible plant is left unpicked until it forms flower heads and

3.名詞B2
釋義

開花結籽

植物未採收而開花結籽

the stage when an edible plant is left unpicked until it forms flower heads and develops seeds rather than being gathered for food

例句

The lettuce had gone to seed after Lien forgot to pick it before summer.

Lien 忘了在夏天前採收,萵苣已經開花結籽了。

fixed phrase: go/run to seed (literal)

If you leave the broccoli in the ground too long, it will run to seed.

如果你把花椰菜留在土裡太久,它就會開花結籽。

同義詞
  • bolting

    the technical gardening term for a plant that has gone to seed prematurely

用法筆記

Always appears in the fixed phrases 'go to seed' or 'run to seed'. Not used outside this construction for this meaning.

4. a worn-down, untidy state that a person, place, or thing develops when nobody ta

4.名詞B2
釋義

衰敗

人或地方因缺乏照顧而變舊

a worn-down, untidy state that a person, place, or thing develops when nobody takes proper care of it

例句

After the owner moved away, the old hotel gradually went to seed.

屋主搬走後,那間老舊的旅館漸漸變得破敗不堪。

fixed phrase: go/run to seed (figurative)

Tunde's once-beautiful garden had sadly gone to seed with weeds everywhere.

Tunde 曾經美麗的花園已經雜草叢生,顯得十分荒廢。

同義詞
  • deteriorate

    more formal and general, not limited to appearance

  • decline

    broader — can refer to health, quality, or standards over time

反義詞
  • thrive

    to grow or develop well with proper care

用法筆記

Always in the set phrases 'go to seed' or 'run to seed'. Applies to people's appearance or the condition of buildings and outdoor spaces.

5. a small starting point from which a thought, emotion, or larger process graduall

5.名詞C2
釋義

萌芽;開端

情感或發展的初期階段

a small starting point from which a thought, emotion, or larger process gradually grows

例句

The seeds of doubt were planted in her mind by the anonymous letter.

那封匿名信在她心中種下了懷疑的種子。

phrase: seeds of [something]

That short conversation contained the seeds of their future business partnership.

那次短暫的談話蘊藏著他們未來事業夥伴關係的開端。

同義詞
  • germ

    more formal and less common; means the earliest stage of something

  • origin

    broader — refers to the starting point of anything, not just ideas or feelings

  • source

    neutral term for where something comes from

反義詞
  • end

    the final point or conclusion of a process or development

用法筆記

Almost always used in the plural — 'the seeds of something'. Commonly followed by 'of + noun' to name what will develop.

6. a player or team placed in a ranked position in a tournament draw so that the st

6.名詞B2
釋義

種子選手

比賽中按實力排名的選手

a player or team placed in a ranked position in a tournament draw so that the strongest competitors do not meet one another in the early rounds

例句

The top seed lost in the first round, which shocked the tennis world.

頭號種子在第一輪就輸了,震驚了整個網球界。

sports ranking: top / first / second seed

Karim was the third seed at the national badminton championship this year.

Karim 是今年全國羽球錦標賽的第三種子。

用法筆記

Commonly paired with ordinal numbers — 'first seed', 'second seed' — or with 'top/number one' for the highest-ranked player.

常見錯誤

The seed of the tournament won easily.
The top seed of the tournament won easily.
💡The word 'seed' needs a ranking qualifier (top, first, number one) when used in this sports sense.

seed — 動詞