9 adverbs to describe how to sprouted

For myself I will climb until the tip of my nose juts out upon the worlduntil it sprouts forth to the air from the topmost timbers:

It was both baptismal and hereditary, surname and given name,given with a coat of fresh, pale, pea-green paint that had been laid on it within the year, and had communicated a certain tender, newly-sprouted, May-morning expression to the old centre and its outshoots.

Another day the Koeri announced that he was going to sow but (pulse) and therefore ordered his servants to bring out the seed and roast it well, that it might germinate quickly; and the barber hearing this went off and had his seed but roasted and the next day he sowed it, but only a very few seeds germinated, while the crop of the Koeri which had not really been roasted sprouted finely.

Although these trees belong to many different species and families, Mr. Cook found that they all have this striking peculiaritywhen cut down they sprout readily from the stumps and are able to survive repeated pollarding; remarkable evidence of the fact that the primeval forests of Peru were long ago cut down for fuel or burned over for agriculture.

It was a long while since he had passed that way, and he had never thought that the seed would sprout so thickly, for he had repeated a hundred times that nothing would germinate, so rotten was all the land.

" Then rode Geraint into the castle court, His charger trampling many a prickly star Of sprouted thistle on the broken stones.

In the laying out of a new plantation the young shoots are generally made use of, which sprout so abundantly from the roots that each individual one soon becomes a perfect plant.

Stifling nights followed sultry, drenching days, till vegetation everywhere sprouted unwholesomely and the mountain slopes had almost the reek of tropic jungles.

If diseased or badly sprouted, potatoes are wholly unfit for food.

9 adverbs to describe how to  sprouted  - Adverbs for  sprouted