Astonishingly, in the wake of the seismic racial justice movement sparked by George Floyd's murder, the policing reform act that bears his name withered on the legislative vine. Peniel E. Joseph, CNN, 27 Aug. 2022 The flu part of the name may lead you along the wrong vine as well. Bruce Y. Lee, Forbes, 26 Aug. 2022 David Lett arrived in the Willamette Valley in 1965 at the age of 25 with 3,000 vine cuttings in the bed of his uncle’s horse trailer. Krista Simmons, Sunset Magazine, 18 Aug. 2022 Grahm may be tilting at vine rows in his quest to create an American rosé based on a model from ancient Provence. Dave Mcintyre, Washington Post, 28 July 2022 The vine also should have turned brownish and died back. Arricca Elin Sansone, House Beautiful, 23 Aug. 2022 Stranger Things involved developing the look and sound of its threatening, vine-laden antagonist Vecna. Carolyn Giardina, The Hollywood Reporter, 21 Aug. 2022 Fruit and vine patterns in the kitchen, plaid in the den, florals in the guest room. Laura Johnston, cleveland, 20 Aug. 2022 The best approach is to cut the vine down to about 1-foot tall and then wait for some vigorous new growth.oregonlive, 7 Aug. 2022
Verb
Gardeners can also use hanging baskets of strawberries, where the fruit will vine downward and make harvesting easier.oregonlive, 17 June 2021 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, from Anglo-French vigne, from Latin vinea vine, vineyard, from feminine of vineus of wine, from vinum wine — more at wine