We have no meanings for "sown from" in our records yet.
1 Or seed may be sown from May to July on a shady border.
2 He said those had to be transplanted; they could not be sown from seed.
3 The seed may be sown from the middle of April to the last of May.
4 The half-hardy varieties should be sown from January to March in pans placed on bottom heat.
5 Seed may be sown from March to May, or in September if an early display is wanted.
6 All the hardy varieties may be sown from May to July for a brilliant display in the following spring.
7 Yet, the seeds of Ottoman bestiality and future rebellion were sown from the very inception of this empire-extending conquest.
8 There is some merit in the plan, if the seed of the burr clover were sown from year to year.
9 Salsify may be sown from the end of March to May, but two sowings will in most cases be sufficient.
10 The seed is thinly sown from January to March, in boxes four to six inches deep, filled with good soil.
11 Antony brushed him aside, only to be met with another, springing up like the warriors sown from the dragon's teeth.
12 Seed may be sown from January to June, and a continuance of bloom may thus be secured during nearly nine months of the year.
13 The tobacco is best sown from the 10th to the 20th of March, and a rich loam is the most favorable soil.
14 These varieties may be sown from the 20th of July to the 10th of August; the soil being previously made rich, light, and friable.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Sown from through the time