home-grown in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for home-grown in the English»Spanish Dictionary

homegrown [Am ˌhoʊmˈɡroʊn, Brit ˌhəʊmˈɡrəʊn] ADJ

I.produce VB trans [Am prəˈd(j)us, Brit prəˈdjuːs]

II.produce VB intr [Am prəˈd(j)us, Brit prəˈdjuːs]

III.produce N U [Am ˈprɑd(j)us, ˈproʊd(j)us, Brit ˈprɒdjuːs]

home-grown in the PONS Dictionary

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Club executives saw, in the precocity of home-grown players, a solution to a new era of financial fair play.
www.independent.co.uk
They were massive and so full of that great home-grown carroty flavour.
www.stuff.co.nz
In the 1980s, with the rise of stadium superstars, many home-grown rock fanzines emerged.
en.wikipedia.org
Their international and home-grown fanbases continue to swell as more and more towns and territories latch onto their distinctive sound.
en.wikipedia.org
Cotton is the basic material but all sorts of fabrics, both imported and home-grown, may be made into longyis.
en.wikipedia.org
We lived on the staple diet of chapatis, dahl and rice supplemented with home-grown organic vegetables.
www.dailymail.co.uk
Though nutritional yeast usually refers to commercial products, inadequately fed prisoners of war have used home-grown yeast to prevent vitamin deficiency.
en.wikipedia.org
In subsequent years, the club went through extensive restructuring to return to financial health, largely with young home-grown players.
en.wikipedia.org
Eight of these must have been home-grown players.
en.wikipedia.org
Into the mid-nineteenth century, bookbinders of home-grown literature typically hand-made their books and sold them in small quantities.
en.wikipedia.org

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