释义 |
planted, ppl. a.|ˈplɑːntɪd, -æ-| [f. plant v. + -ed1.] 1. Set in the ground, as a plant; fixed in the ground, set up, established, etc.; placed surreptitiously or misleadingly; hidden esp. so as to deceive the discoverer: see plant v.
14..Voc. in Wr.-Wülcker 590/4 Insitus, planted or graffed. c1440Promp. Parv. 403/1 Plantyd, plantatus. a1625Jas. I Ps. i. 3 Hee shall be like a planted tree. 1685Baxter Paraphr. N.T. Acts xv. 36 Converted Souls and Planted Churches, must be further visited. 1804J. Grahame Sabbath (1839) 23/2 The planted standard falls Upon the heaving ground. 1864Webster. Planted (Joinery), fixed in place, as a projecting member or molding, after having been first wrought on a separate piece of stuff. 1963TV Times (Austral.) 18 Apr. 10/2 Planted, hidden. 1972Jrnl. Social Psychol. Dec. 301 When the class was asked if anyone wanted to make a statement to the ‘teacher’, a planted student responded with a standard complaining, corrective request. 1973M. Woodhouse Blue Bone x. 93 ‘He said..that he was quite happy where he was.’ ‘In answer to a planted question, yes, he did.’ ‘You're fairly sure it was planted?’..‘Of course... This whole thing was just a put-up job... So that Karel could state for the record that he was fine where he was.’ 1977G. V. Higgins Dreamland xiv. 169 We're even bigger suckers for a planted story..if we really had to scout around for it. 1978J. Gardner Dancing Dodo xxxix. 324 It's a greater threat than a planted nuclear device. 2. a. Furnished with plants, trees, etc.
14..Voc. in Wr.-Wülcker 598/32 Obsitus,..by-set a bowte, or plantyd a bowte. 1719De Foe Crusoe (1840) I. vii. 118 It looked like a planted garden. 1849Macaulay Hist. Eng. ii. I. 219 In the newly planted alleys of Versailles. †b. Sc. Of a church or congregation: Supplied with a minister, settled. Obs.
1699T. Boston Art of Man-Fishing (1900) 75 When thou goest to preach in planted Congregations. |