The seed of this plant germinates on the damp ground to which it falls in early summer.
When the seed germinates it sends out a filament which penetrates into the soil and fixes the seedling firmly.
Parsley, like celery seed, germinates slowly, and is sometimes about a month in making its appearance.
Since celerygerminates so slowly, it is well to drop a lettuce- seed every few inches, to indicate clearly just where the rows are.
Only seed which germinates 75 per cent or more should be sown in the spring of the year unless the rate of seeding is increased to make up for poor germination.
The branches of these plants will help to hold the seed in place until it germinates and the young plants become established.
Farmers should have no trouble in purchasing hulled seed, and therefore it is recommended that only hulled seed which germinates well be sown.
It is on this account that unhulled seed, which germinates poorly in the laboratory, often will produce good stands when sown during the winter.
When growing under natural conditions, seed which has lain in the ground over winter germinates in sufficient quantity during the following spring to produce a stand.
The large number of failures in obtaining a stand of sweet clover are due primarily to acid soils, lack of inoculation, and seed which germinates poorly.
Hulled seed usually germinates much better than unhulled seed, as is shown in Table I.
When sweet clover is to be sown in the spring it is very important that only hulled seed which germinates 75 per cent or more be sown.
It bears abundance of seeds, but not one in ten thousand germinates and becomes a mature tree.
When an acorn germinates in good soil, and receives sufficient light and moisture, it produces a merchantable tree; but in poor soil and under unfavorable circumstances it becomes a stunted bush only.
As the seed germinates rather slowly, the ground often becomes crusted or baked over the seeds, in which case it should be broken and fined with a garden rake.
If the land has been thoroughly prepared in the fall, the seed may be sown on one of the late light snows in spring and as the snow melts the seed is carried into the land, and germinates very quickly.
In most cases, the June-grass germinates and grows somewhat slowly, and it is usually advisable to sow four or five quarts of timothy grass to the acre with the June-grass seed.
Among Phaeophyceae it is well known that the oospore of Fucaceae germinates directly into the sexual plant, and there is thus only one generation.
The carpogonium germinates forthwith, drawing its nourishment almost wholly from the parent plant.
After a short time it comes to rest, and, after developing a thin cell wall, germinates by sending out one or two filaments (Fig.
A very good plant for this purpose is the sweet pea, whose pollen germinates very rapidly, especially in warm weather.
Other sowings may be made in May and June, and at this period of the year the seed germinates most quickly in boxes placed in a cool shady spot out of doors.
The seed germinates but slowly in dull weather, and the seedlings when raised are almost certain to damp off.
Cyclamen seed not only germinates slowly, but it also grows in the most capricious manner; sometimes a few plants come up long after others have made a good start.
Ordinary men see the fruits of their action; the seed sown by men of genius germinates slowly.
After a short period of activity the zoospore comes to rest, loses all means of propulsion, germinates and grows into a new Ectocarpus plant.
One of these swarming zoospores fuses with the individual which first ceased swimming about, with the result that a much larger, non-swimming individual is formed which, after a short resting period, germinates and grows into a new sea weed.
After fusion the new-formed cell germinates at once into a new Channelled Wrack.
This subsequently germinates and forms a new individual.
Money, be the sum great or small, is a seed which germinates into abuses.
The work of the first is like a grain of sand, out of which nothing comes through all eternity; the other's work is like the living seed thrown into the ground; it germinates and brings forth harvests.
The venerableness of yogis germinatesin the first stage, it blossoms in the second, and becomes fruitful in the third stage of yoga.
The gross desire that germinates in its wishes, which become the causes of the regeneration of men in some form or other, is known by the name of mind; and which becomes altogether extinct in men, knowing the truly knowable one.
When we sow the grain upon the earth, it would seem thrown away, but by the law of the Great Creator, the seed germinates in it and produces again, sometimes thirty and forty fold.
Every wicked deed is first conceived in the mind, hence the need of casting away the evil thought before it germinates into actual crime, which leads to prison, the gallows and to spiritual death.
If, for instance, you sow a barley-corn at too great a depth, the seed germinates and forms a few roots, but it immediately sends out a stem which grows upwards towards the light.
No plant within them experiences the blessings of peace from the time it germinates until the day that it dies.
The seed should be planted in early spring, while the ground is moist, as it germinates very slowly.
It is well to sow three or four quarts per acre of timothy seed, for the timothy germinates very quickly, and makes a green area the first season, but is killed out as soon as the June grass gains a foothold.
As the seed germinates rather slowly the ground often becomes crusted or baked over the seeds, in which case it should be broken and fined with a garden rake.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "germinates" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.