What's the difference between outgrow and outgrown?

Outgrow


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To surpass in growing; to grow more than.
  • (v. t.) To grow out of or away from; to grow too large, or too aged, for; as, to outgrow clothing; to outgrow usefulness; to outgrow an infirmity.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Further management of the congenital cases was based on the experience that children outgrow this disorder; periodic dilatation may augment the natural process.
  • (2) Our findings lead us to support a conservative attitude regarding surgery, at least if only mild symptoms are present, If the patients can be satisfactorily treated medically, they seem to outgrow their symptoms in early childhood.
  • (3) Vegetative cells outgrowing from glycerol-induced myxospores were regularly pleomorphic, a condition that persisted through the first cell division.
  • (4) Small tumor fragments were transferred into culture flasks and cultured until a confluent monolayer was formed by the outgrowing cells.
  • (5) Chinese hamster V79 multicell spheroids growing in tissue culture exhibit many of the same properties as solid tumors outgrowing their blood supply, including the spontaneous development of both noncycling and hypoxic cell populations expected to be resistant to many chemotherapeutic agents.
  • (6) In the long-term experiments, with the lower TNF doses, in situ evidence of regrowth was observed (outgrowing zones in the nodules) on about the 40th day of treatment, and nodule recovery was confirmed by the resumption of DNA synthesis measured on the 50th day of treatment.
  • (7) Whereas the intramembranous particle number in glial pseudopodia is only slightly lower than in their perikaryal plasmalemma, the number of particles in outgrowing axons increases about eightfold from the periphery towards the perikaryon.
  • (8) The sequence encoding the most efficient trans-activation-responsive region did not outgrow others.
  • (9) More efficient glucose uptake enabled a mutant to outgrow its parent and caused a decrease in the steady-state glucose concentration in the chemostat.
  • (10) The outgrowing serotonergic fibers from the mesencephalic raphe graft showed a hyperinnervation pattern in the cerebellar cortex adjacent to the graft.
  • (11) Parents were the first to suspect the hearing loss in 48 cases but more often than not were told that the child would outgrow it or was too young to test.
  • (12) These findings suggest that the plasmalemma of the outgrowing nerve, and especially of the growth cone, is immature and that maturation is accompanied by the insertion of intramembranous particles.
  • (13) 146:430-432, 1981) we isolated three genes involved in Bacillus subtilis spore outgrowth by screening the library by hybridization with labeled RNA from outgrowing spores in the presence of an excess of unlabeled vegetative RNA.
  • (14) Spores of the mutant synthesized no DNA when germinated at high temperature, although an outgrowing cell appeared.
  • (15) Only the inner surface of the vitelline membrane has this growth-promoting potential, which markedly and progressively declines during incubation in ovo because of systemic factors rather than because of a direct influence by the outgrowing yolk sac-serosal membrane.
  • (16) Fluorescence immunohistochemistry revealed the presence of the integrin beta 1-chain on the outgrowing neurites.
  • (17) Major contributors to the outgrowing axon's environment are the lumbosacral (LS) somites which give rise to limb muscle cells and the LS somatopleural mesoderm which gives rise to limb connective tissues.
  • (18) Most children do outgrow their respiratory symptoms but not the susceptibility of their airways to allergens.
  • (19) In the presence of inhibitors affecting membrane potential, vegetative cells were as sensitive to chloroquine as outgrowing spores.
  • (20) These results indicate that serotonergic and dopaminergic neurons located within the mesencephalic raphe graft clearly differed from each other in their ability to extend their processes into the host cerebellum, which provides further evidence for the existence of specific interactions between outgrowing serotonergic fibers and their terminal fields (targets).

Outgrown


Definition:

  • (p. p.) of Outgrow

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Unfortunately, peanut reaction is not outgrown and remains a life-long threat.
  • (2) She read the stories and the novel first as an adult, and in the years since, turning to them again and again, she has never felt herself to have outgrown them.
  • (3) Exposure to interferon did not modify the expression of filaments in the outgrown blastocyst.
  • (4) A radical reworking of Douglas Sirk with Julianne Moore's 1950s housewife married to repressed homosexual Dennis Quaid, the film earned Haynes an Oscar nomination and confirmed him as a major talent, and one who'd outgrown the role of poster boy for New Queer Cinema.
  • (5) The company has outgrown its present R&D centre, which employs 110 people.
  • (6) Bumetanide has outgrown to become a tool for physiologists and pharmacologists in renal transport research.
  • (7) Mature animals that have "outgrown" their genetic susceptibility to audiogenic seizures are made susceptible again by acetoxycycloheximide.
  • (8) Most children with generalized tonic-clonic seizures have a benign developmental disorder of seizure threshold that will be outgrown with or without treatment.
  • (9) We conclude that, although respiratory symptoms disappear in one half the children with asthma and although adults may believe that they have outgrown their disease, adults still have the potency to respond to inhaled allergens.
  • (10) However, most tumors develop regions that have outgrown their vascular supply, and therefore present severe hypoxia.
  • (11) Primary trophoblastic giant cells outgrown from blastocysts and placental trophoblast from 16-day pregnancies expressed antigens of both sources at all stages in culture.
  • (12) Spurs, famously formed by school old boys who met under a lamppost on Tottenham High Road in 1882 to discuss playing the great new game of football, have outgrown the home they moved into 17 years later.
  • (13) It suggests that Record Store Day isn’t necessary any more; the vinyl boom has outgrown it.
  • (14) He had a prior cardiac arrest and had outgrown need for a tracheostomy.
  • (15) In many ways, Luther's key players have outgrown it.
  • (16) Prospective studies have demonstrated that many patients who had seemingly outgrown their disease experienced symptoms again as they grew older.
  • (17) In this report, we provide evidence that, although it is not essential, the gIII protein is required for efficient virus growth and that gIII mutants are quickly outgrown by wild-type virus in mixed infections.
  • (18) In a sweatshirt and jeans, sluggish with jetlag, at 46 he has outgrown the buff pretty-boy look of his youth – and some of his old habits too.
  • (19) Some are outgrown, others are followed by serious problems; a third group may develop a new problem at maturity.
  • (20) But it is absolutely typical of the Orange prize founder Kate Mosse to present the end of the 17-year sponsorship as a blessing in disguise – and to suggest, in the nicest possible way, that the literary grandees behind the award had in any case outgrown their relationship with the mobile phone company before it merged with T-Mobile and decided to refocus its sponsorship on film.

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