uprooting|uprootings in English

noun

extraction (as of a plant and its roots from the ground); complete eradication; displacement of something from its native environment

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "uprooting|uprootings" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "uprooting|uprootings", or refer to the context using the word "uprooting|uprootings" in the English Dictionary.

1. Jehovah has already provided the basis for uprooting sin.

2. The great dislocation and uprooting that this seismic shift entails have had at least two results.

3. The mass uprooting of our period was neither unexpected nor without more modest precedents.

4. Cadence was founded to effectively treat high risk youth without uprooting them from their home

5. These criticisms include major ecological changes, reservoir sedimentation and the uprooting of large numbers of people.

6. Similar estimates derive from observed forest destruction, scaled from the uprooting of trees in nuclear weapons tests.

7. Eclipses are very effective in finding weak, outworn situations and in uprooting them in the blink of an eye.

8. There should not be too much uprooting, and you have a good chance of breeding as long as you do not overcrowd.

9. Buttressing is thought to be a mechanical adaptation that apparently prevents tipping and uprooting of trees by wind and gravity, especially in shallow or unstable substrates (Mattheck 1991).

10. As well as being the most rational alternative for assortment on uphill and downhill gradients in excess of 40%, it is also suitable for full-tree uprooting.

11. 2 The accompanying fratricide—it involved the murder and uprooting of millions of Hindus and Muslims—condemned India and Pakistan to several destructive wars and a debilitating arms race.

12. Hurricane Irma decimated the small Caribbean island of Barbuda, ripping apart buildings, uprooting trees and killing at least one person as its 185 mph winds swept across the two-island nation

13. Buttressing is thought to be a mechanical adaptation that apparently prevents tipping and uprooting of trees by wind and gravity, especially in shallow or unstable substrates (Mattheck 1991).

14. About How to Be an Antiracist #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the National Book Award–winning author of Stamped from the Beginning comes a “groundbreaking” (Time) approach to understanding and uprooting racism and inequality in our society—and in ourselves

15. over the head, being beaten with a pipe with your head under a table, being slapped, fencing the school compound, uprooting a tree trunk, digging trenches, cleaning ablution facilities and toilets, being made to walk on one’s knees, splitting firewood, and unreasonable suspensions.