oversummer
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]oversummer (third-person singular simple present oversummers, present participle oversummering, simple past and past participle oversummered)
- (intransitive) To spend the summer (in a particular place or form).
- 1976, Subodh K. Jain, Vernal Pools: Their Ecology and Conservation:
- The snails (Bakerilymnaea cockerelli) oversummer in the adult or near-adult morphology using a form of estivation.
- 1998, D.G. Jones, The Epidemiology of Plant Diseases, →ISBN, page 336:
- Both powdery mildew and cereal rusts oversummer on volunteer crops in the asexual stage, infect the autumn-sown crop and, eventually, overwinter on the volunteers to infect the crops in spring (Zadoks, 1961).
- 2013, Alice Taylor, The Gift of a Garden, →ISBN:
- Dragged down in early winter from the top of the garden where they oversummer, they are placed on the front window sills looking sad and forlorn.