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    Up·root
    /ˌəpˈro͞ot/

    verb

    • 1. pull (something, especially a tree or plant) out of the ground: "the elephant's trunk is powerful enough to uproot trees" Similar pull uproot outtake outrip out/upOpposite plant
    • 2. move (someone) from their home or a familiar location: "my father traveled constantly and uprooted his family several times"
  2. The meaning of UPROOT is to remove as if by pulling up. How to use uproot in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Uproot.

  3. UPROOT definition: 1. to pull a plant including its roots out of the ground: 2. to remove a person from their home or…. Learn more.

  4. Aug 14, 2015 · UPROOT meaning: 1. to pull a plant including its roots out of the ground: 2. to remove a person from their home or…. Learn more.

  5. When you uproot people, you move them from one place to a completely new one. Your parents may need to uproot you if your mom gets a new job all the way across the country. One meaning of the verb uproot is "move," especially when a person is forced to move.

  6. to destroy or eradicate as if by pulling out roots: root: The conquerors uprooted many of the Native traditions. Synonyms: remove, eliminate, banish, extirpate. to displace, as from a home or country; tear away, as from customs or a way of life: to uproot a people.

  7. If you uproot yourself or if you are uprooted, you leave, or are made to leave, a place where you have lived for a long time. ...the trauma of uprooting themselves from their homes. [VERB pronoun-reflexive] He had no wish to uproot Dena from her present home.

  8. Definition of uproot verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. to pull a tree or plant out of the ground: Hundreds of trees were uprooted in the storm. uproot verb [T] (PERSON) to make someone leave a place where they have been living for a long time: The war has uprooted nearly half the country's population. (Definition of uproot from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  10. Jun 2, 2024 · uproot (third-person singular simple present uproots, present participle uprooting, simple past and past participle uprooted) ( transitive) Of a pig or other animal: to dig up (something in the ground) using the snout; to rummage for (something) in the ground; to grub up, to root, to rout.

  11. v.t. 1. to pull out by or as if by the roots. 2. to destroy or eradicate as if by pulling out roots. 3. to displace or remove violently, as from a home, country, customs, or way of life. v.i. 4. to become uprooted. [1610–20]

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