Spring in a sentence as a noun

You'll survive the winter on Twinkies, but you'll be in pretty bad health come spring.

A bit further afield, you have to patch or replace your inner tubes when they spring leaks.

This right does not spring solely from the US Fourth Amendment; it is a human and natural right as well.

As the cam rotates, it slowly raises up the hammer, which has tension provided by the spring.

Spring in a sentence as a verb

Last spring, Facebook reportedly turned down a $750 million buyout offer, holding out instead for as much as $2 billion.

A hammer, represented as the horizontal pin, is released from a caught position with spring tension on it, which slams into the heart cam and forces it to reset to a predetermined position.

Back before we had fancy alloy springs and were forced to use Steel as the material for mainsprings because that's all we knew, watches had problems where a freshly wound watch would run fast and a watch that hasn't been wound for a day or so would start to run slow, as the strength of the spring tapered off. The Geneva Drive was a solution, though it's more of a hack, to only let the spring release power inside the middle of it's power arc, by preventing the watch from unwinding past a certain low point and preventing the user from winding the spring up to it's strongest point.

No matter what else happens in the world, the core team will be able to focus entirely on Meteor for several years, without taking on consulting work or trying to create some other application on top of Meteor to sellDoes that raise any red flags for anybody?Do development frameworks built for their own sake ever really work in the wild?I think of successful ways to build web apps, and the names that spring to mind are rails, django, php, etc. that evolved by developers who were using them to build stuff.

Spring definitions

noun

the season of growth; "the emerging buds were a sure sign of spring"; "he will hold office until the spring of next year"

See also: springtime

noun

a metal elastic device that returns to its shape or position when pushed or pulled or pressed; "the spring was broken"

noun

a natural flow of ground water

See also: fountain outflow outpouring

noun

a point at which water issues forth

noun

the elasticity of something that can be stretched and returns to its original length

See also: give springiness

noun

a light, self-propelled movement upwards or forwards

See also: leap leaping saltation bound bounce

verb

move forward by leaps and bounds; "The horse bounded across the meadow"; "The child leapt across the puddle"; "Can you jump over the fence?"

See also: jump leap bound

verb

develop into a distinctive entity; "our plans began to take shape"

See also: form

verb

spring back; spring away from an impact; "The rubber ball bounced"; "These particles do not resile but they unite after they collide"

See also: bounce resile bound rebound recoil reverberate ricochet

verb

develop suddenly; "The tire sprang a leak"

verb

produce or disclose suddenly or unexpectedly; "He sprang these news on me just as I was leaving"