释义 |
Definition of regrow in English: regrowverbregrew, regrown riːˈɡrəʊˌrēˈɡrō Grow or cause to grow again. (使)再生,(使)重新长出 no object four days later the fins had started to regrow with object a starfish can regrow all its arms if necessary Example sentencesExamples - Imagine if the skin could be regrown from a cell sample and then grafted on.
- Nerve cells in the brain, unlike other cells of the body, cannot regrow.
- The practice of taking up chicory plants in the autumn, cutting off their leaves, and replanting the roots in a dark cellar so that they regrow small, white leaves originated in France.
- The wet summers have meant grass has regrown very quickly and thick, and it is a big task for them to keep up this role.
- And no matter how aggressively one attempts to scrape it away, the same microscopic jungle regrows time and again.
- This perennial, bush-like plant regrows its slender leaves each time it's picked and is the strongest-tasting rocket of all.
- Patients are given exercises to re-establish a range of facial expressions as the nerve very slowly regrows or heals.
- The dying bulb foliage will be covered later in the season when the shrub regrows.
- These evergreen giant herbs spring from rhizomes, flower, fruit and die and then regrow from a sucker.
- But parallel developments in the cultivation of ‘stem cells’ - seed cells, which can be grown into a precise match for any tissue in any person - might make it possible to regrow dead retina.
- During the procedure, the laser pulses for less than a second - long enough to heat up the hair and impede the follicle's ability to regrow.
- Projects to regrow marginal strips of greenery on arable farmland, such as one at Manor Farm in the Yorkshire Wolds, have also had a positive effect on the bee population, he said.
- She will remain in care until all her claws have regrown.
- I am tired of telling them that nobody asks to become bald, nor do I want to spend thousands of dollars regrowing my hair.
- In some areas, heather destroyed in blazes over 30 years ago has not regrown.
- These colonies could hardly be regrown on solid media, and they did not grow at all in liquid media.
- Diseased poplars make an effort to regrow, but continue to drop leaves.
- The drug, which has been developed in conjunction with scientists at Trinity College, Dublin, aims to stop cancer cells from regrowing after they have been attacked during treatment.
- According to one of his aides, the ambassador had to shave his beard when he made a business trip to Tokyo, but he started regrowing the beard upon his return to Jakarta.
- I may become bald, through no choice of my own and with no possibility of regrowing my hair.
Definition of regrow in US English: regrowverbˌrēˈɡrō Grow or cause to grow again. (使)再生,(使)重新长出 Example sentencesExamples - Imagine if the skin could be regrown from a cell sample and then grafted on.
- The wet summers have meant grass has regrown very quickly and thick, and it is a big task for them to keep up this role.
- The practice of taking up chicory plants in the autumn, cutting off their leaves, and replanting the roots in a dark cellar so that they regrow small, white leaves originated in France.
- I am tired of telling them that nobody asks to become bald, nor do I want to spend thousands of dollars regrowing my hair.
- This perennial, bush-like plant regrows its slender leaves each time it's picked and is the strongest-tasting rocket of all.
- During the procedure, the laser pulses for less than a second - long enough to heat up the hair and impede the follicle's ability to regrow.
- These evergreen giant herbs spring from rhizomes, flower, fruit and die and then regrow from a sucker.
- These colonies could hardly be regrown on solid media, and they did not grow at all in liquid media.
- I may become bald, through no choice of my own and with no possibility of regrowing my hair.
- She will remain in care until all her claws have regrown.
- Nerve cells in the brain, unlike other cells of the body, cannot regrow.
- Projects to regrow marginal strips of greenery on arable farmland, such as one at Manor Farm in the Yorkshire Wolds, have also had a positive effect on the bee population, he said.
- The drug, which has been developed in conjunction with scientists at Trinity College, Dublin, aims to stop cancer cells from regrowing after they have been attacked during treatment.
- And no matter how aggressively one attempts to scrape it away, the same microscopic jungle regrows time and again.
- According to one of his aides, the ambassador had to shave his beard when he made a business trip to Tokyo, but he started regrowing the beard upon his return to Jakarta.
- Patients are given exercises to re-establish a range of facial expressions as the nerve very slowly regrows or heals.
- But parallel developments in the cultivation of ‘stem cells’ - seed cells, which can be grown into a precise match for any tissue in any person - might make it possible to regrow dead retina.
- Diseased poplars make an effort to regrow, but continue to drop leaves.
- The dying bulb foliage will be covered later in the season when the shrub regrows.
- In some areas, heather destroyed in blazes over 30 years ago has not regrown.
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