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root graft

noun

  1. Horticulture. the process of grafting a shoot or stem of one plant onto a section of root of another.
  2. a plant, commonly a young one, that is the result of root grafting.
  3. the natural underground growing together or joining of the roots of nearby plants.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of root graft1

First recorded in 1815–25
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Root′-fī′bril, one of the fine divisions of a root; Root′-form, a form assumed by an insect when feeding on roots; Root′-graft′ing, the process of grafting scions on a part of the root of some appropriate stock; Root′-hair, a delicate filament developed from a single cell.—adj.

From

The whole root graft should not be more than six or seven inches long.

From

There exists a 4th type of walnut graft, dating from 1880, which if done intelligently, permits the rapid multiplication of the walnut—the root graft.

From

Theoretically perhaps a whole-root tree may be demonstrated to be better; practically, we cannot see that it becomes so necessarily, because we have trees planted at a time when the root graft on a piece was the general rule in propagation.

From

As for the claim that a root graft on a piece-root never makes a vigorous tree, we know that is nonsense.

From

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