If he is referring to the time as your dating he is basically saying that he wants you two to experiment which if you are young be careful and don't do anything you don't want to do because doing "things" does not make you grow. If he is referring to you two being apart then he means that it is time for you two to learn more about yourselves without one another and grow from other experiences and be broken up.
half some of the time i think yes its grows using sprite
Most of the time it's just a long-winded way of saying 'using'
No that is just an old saying
AHHHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH! (ROFL) I do not understand your question. It might be a saying. Money doesn't grow on fingernails.
All fingernails grow at the same rate... I can't really understand what you are saying
it means they need to get some balls hense the term grow a pair!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am saying a sentence using the word collagen.
The saying "time is gold", or "time is money," is just a way of saying time, like gold, is precious.
In Act I Scene 3, the witches have appeared and have hailed Macbeth. Banquo is put out and says "What about meee?", although he puts it more nicely and less whiny. He says, "If you can look into the seeds of time and say which grain will grow and which will not, speak then to me." Looking at a handful of seeds and saying which ones will grow is a metaphor for predicting the future; the seeds become a metaphor for all the potential events, some of which will happen and some will not. It is a deeper and more powerful way of saying "predict the future".
Another way of saying 'at this time' is 'now' or 'right now'.
It's saying, "What time is it?"
I GROW veggies in my large garden.