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Definitions

seedtime

[seed-tahym] / ˈsidˌtaɪm /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

To understand it, we need to go back to what can accurately be termed the seedtime of sexism.

From Salon • Oct. 23, 2022

Eliot, Perse tells of the seedtime of history.

From Time Magazine Archive

His disciples thought they had never seen such promise in His life as at this hour: seedtime seemed to them to be past, and the harvest at hand.

From The Expositor's Bible: The Gospel of St John, Vol. II by Dods, Marcus

Heno was said to gather the clouds and pour out the warm rain; he was the patron of husbandry, and was invoked at seedtime and harvest.

From The Masculine Cross A History of Ancient and Modern Crosses and Their Connection with the Mysteries of Sex Worship; Also an Account of the Kindred Phases of Phallic Faiths and Practices by Anonymous

But a more sacred seedtime than all these is the procreation of children, and therefore Sophocles did well to call Aphrodite "fruitful Cytherea."

From Plutarch's Morals by Shilleto, Arthur Richard