to begin to grow; shoot forth, as a plant from a seed.
(of a seed or plant) to put forth buds or shoots.
to develop or grow quickly: a boy awkwardly sprouting into manhood.
verb (used with object)
to cause to sprout.
to remove sprouts from: Sprout and boil the potatoes.
noun
a shoot of a plant.
a new growth from a germinating seed, or from a rootstock, tuber, bud, or the like.
something resembling or suggesting a sprout, as in growth.
a young person; youth.
sprouts,
the young shoots of alfalfa, soybeans, etc., eaten as a raw vegetable.
Brussels sprout.
Origin of sprout
1150–1200; (v.) Middle English spr(o)uten,Old English -sprūtan, in āsproten (past participle; see a-3); cognate with Middle Dutch sprūten,German spriessen to sprout; akin to Greek speírein to scatter; (noun) Middle English; compare Middle Dutch, Middle Low German sprute
SYNONYMS FOR sprout
1 spring, bud, burgeon, develop.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR sprout ON THESAURUS.COM
OTHER WORDS FROM sprout
non·sprout·ing,adjectivere·sprout,verbun·der·sprout,nounun·der·sprout,verb (used without object)