Apedia

Teem Team Verb Noun English Teeming February Homophones

Word teem
Date February 22, 2014
Type verb
Syllables TEEM
Etymology The verb "teem" and the noun "team" are not just homophones, they are also etymological kin. "Teem" is derived from Old English "tīman" or "tæman," which originally meant "to bring forth offspring" or "to become pregnant" and which is related to the ancestor of "team," the Old English noun "tēam," meaning "offspring, lineage, or group of draft animals." "Team" can still be used to refer to a brood of young animals, especially pigs or ducks, but both "teem" and "team" have otherwise largely left their offspring-related senses behind.
Examples By mid-morning the theme park will already be teeming with visitors.

"Dispensing with the last installment's cumbersome mythology, this one gets back to basics, dumping the hero on a desert planet teeming with lethal critters and determined bounty hunters." - From a movie review by Tom Russo in The Boston Globe, January 12, 2014
Definition 1 : to become filled to overflowing
2 : to be present in large quantity

Tags: wordoftheday::verb

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Small beer drink desdemona iago february noun smawl-beer

Previous card: Tangerines word french mandarin noun fruit thought color

Up to card list: Word of the Day