| graft | Acquisition of money, position, etc | en |
| graft | inserted a portion of a plant into the stem of another (Horticulture); surgically transplant a portion of tissue from one place to another; illegally or dishonestly acquire money fiil | en |
| graft | illegal or unfair practice for profit or personal advantage; also, anything thus gained | en |
| graft | into another; to practice grafting | en |
| graft | To insert scions from one tree, or kind of tree, etc | en |
| graft | To cover, as a ring bolt, block strap, splicing, etc | en |
| graft | with a weaving of small cord or rope- yarns | en |
| graft | A "soft thing" | en |
| graft | or "easy thing;" | en |
| graft | place athe organ of a donor into the body of a recipient | en |
| graft | cause to grow together parts from different plants; "graft the cherry tree branch onto the plum tree" | en |
| graft | the act of grafting something onto something else | en |
| graft | " the act of grafting something onto something else (surgery) tissue or organ transplanted from a donor to a recipient; in some cases the patient can be both donor and recipient cause to grow together parts from different plants; "graft the cherry tree branch onto the plum tree | en |
| graft | A "soft thing" or "easy thing;" a "snap | en |
| graft | the act of grafting something onto something else (surgery) tissue or organ transplanted from a donor to a recipient; in some cases the patient can be both donor and recipient cause to grow together parts from different plants; "graft the cherry tree branch onto the plum tree | en |
| graft | a "snap | en |
| graft | To join (one thing) to another as if by grafting, so as to bring about a close union | en |
| graft | To implant a portion of (living flesh or akin) in a lesion so as to form an organic union | en |
| graft | A criminals special branch of practice | en |
| graft | Illicit profit by corrupt means, especially in public life | en |
| graft | Hard work (colloq) | en |
| graft | A cut of the take (money) | en |
| graft | : A bribe, especially on an ongoing basis | en |
| graft | To cover, as a ring bolt, block strap, splicing, etc., with a weaving of small cord or rope-yarns | en |
| graft | To insert scions from one tree, or kind of tree, etc., into another; to practice grafting | en |
| graft | Corruption in official life | en |
| graft | A small shoot or scion of a tree inserted in another tree, the stock of which is to support and nourish it. The two unite and become one tree, but the graft determines the kind of fruit | en |
| graft | A portion of living tissue used in the operation of autoplasty | en |
| graft | To insert (a graft) in a branch or stem of another tree; to propagate by insertion in another stock; also, to insert a graft upon | en |
| graft | A branch or portion of a tree growing from such a shoot | en |
| graft | The two unite and become one tree, but the graft determines the kind of fruit | en |
| graft | A con job | en |
| graft | A small shoot or scion of a tree inserted in another tree, the stock of which is to support and nourish it | en |
| graft | the practice of offering something (usually money) in order to gain an illicit advantage | en |
| graft | by dishonest or unjust means, as by actual theft or by taking advantage of a public office or any position of trust or employment to obtain fees, perquisites, profits on contracts, legislation, pay for work not done or service not performed, etc | en |
| graft | any unattached tissue or organ for transplantation | en |
| graft | Any tissue or organ that is implanted or transplanted, including a section of a blood vessel used to make a detour around a blocked artery, such as during a coronary artery bypass graft | en |
| graft | piece of skin taken from one area of the body to cover a defect or burn in another area | en |
| graft | A tissue or organ that is removed and placed somewhere else If the graft is from one person to themselves (for example, a hair transplant for bald men where their own hair is moved from the back of the head to the top), it is called an "autograft " If the graft is between identical twins, it is called an "isograft" (this kind of graft is not rejected) If the graft is between members of the same species (for example, between father and son), the graft is called an "allograft " If the graft is between different species (for example, a heart valve graft from a pig to a human), it is called a "xenograft" (pronounced ZEE-no-graft) | en |
| graft | A transplanted tissue or organ (for example, kidney, heart or liver) | en |
| graft | Healthy skin, bone, or other tissue taken from one part of the body and used to replace diseased or injured tissue removed from another part of the body | en |
| graft | Woody species are grafted when a section cut from the stem of one plant is grafted onto the stem of another in such a way that the cambium of the two plants meet The cambiums will grow into one another, allowing water and nutrients to flow back and forth between the two plants Most often, it is a stem (scion) that is grafted to a rootstock The rootstock can serve to make the scion resistant to soil borne disease or to control its size (dwarf varieties ) | en |
| graft | a transplant; a tissue or organ transferred from one individual to another | en |
| graft | In politics, graft is used to refer to the activity of using power or authority to obtain money dishonestly. another politician accused of graft. In horticulture, the act of placing a portion of one plant (called a bud or scion) into or on a stem, root, or branch of another (called the stock) in such a way that a union forms and the partners continue to grow. Grafting is used for various purposes: to repair injured trees, produce dwarf trees and shrubs, strengthen plants' resistance to certain diseases, retain varietal characteristics, adapt varieties to adverse soil or climatic conditions, ensure pollination, produce multifruited or multiflowered plants, and propagate certain species (such as hybrid roses) that can be propagated in no other way. In theory, any two plants that are closely related botanically and that have a continuous cambium can be grafted. Grafts between species of the same genus are often successful and between genera occasionally so, but grafts between families are nearly always failures | en |
| graft | A graft is a piece of healthy skin or bone, or a healthy organ, which is attached to a damaged part of your body by a medical operation in order to replace it. I am having a skin graft on my arm soon | en |
| graft | portion of a plant inserted into the stem of another (Horticulture); portion of tissue which has been surgically transplanted from one place to another; act of grafting; illegal or dishonest acquisition of money isim | en |
| graft | If a piece of healthy skin or bone or a healthy organ is grafted onto a damaged part of your body, it is attached to that part of your body by a medical operation. The top layer of skin has to be grafted onto the burns | en |
| graft | If a part of one plant or tree is grafted onto another plant or tree, they are joined together so that they will become one plant or tree, often in order to produce a new variety. Pear trees are grafted on quince rootstocks | en |
| graft | Graft means hard work. His career has been one of hard graft | en |
| graft | (surgery) tissue or organ transplanted from a donor to a recipient; in some cases the patient can be both donor and recipient | en |
| graft | An organ for transplant | en |
| graft | If you graft one idea or system on to another, you try to join one to the other. The Japanese tried to graft their own methods on to this different structure | en |
| graft | Add a branch to a multipoint router network when a site on that branch subscribes to or asks to join a multicast call | en |
| graft | A kind of mirrored sheet (q v ) that represents a host window, typically a root window The graft is where the CLIM window hierarchy is "spliced" onto that of the host system The graft maintains screen invariants, such as the number of pixels per inch | en |
| graft | a piece of tissue taken from one area and placed at another | en |
| graft | (ParentKey As String, Dictionary As GlabDictionary)Copies the values from the supplied dictionary into this dictionary, rooted at the given ParentKey In this sense, it is much like grafting a branch onto the tree at a given point Only keyed items in the supplied dictionary that are paths (e g , begin with the solidus '/' path separator character) are copied The supplied ParentKey should not end with a path separator character This method performs an operation that is the inverse of the Splice method; this method performs an operation somewhat similar to the Import method | en |
| graft | - the transplanted kidney | en |
| graft | Transplanted tissue from one area of the body to another (As in use of a saphenous vein graft from the leg to bypass a coronary artery blockage during coronary artery bypass surgery) | en |
| graft | Add a branch to a multipoint router network when a site on that branch subscribes to or asks to join a multicast /m call | en |
| graft | An organ or tissue that is transplanted | en |
| graft | A tube created by using portions of another artery or vein from the patient's body or synthetic materials to reroute blood around a blockage | en |
| graft | A piece of gum tissue or synthetic material placed in contact with tissue to repair a defect or supplement a deficiency | en |
| graft | A transplanted tissue or organ | en |
| graft | —Healthy tissue that is used to replace diseased or defective tissue | en |
| graft | A type of access for haemodialysis The graft is a small plastic tube that connects an artery to a vein It is inserted into the arm or leg by a surgeon Haemodialysis needles are inserted into the graft, which can be used many hundreds of times | en |
| graft | a transplanted piece of tissue | en |
| graft | uninjured skin, which is removed from its original site and placed on the burn wound | en |
| graft | Tissue taken from one person (donor) and transferred to another person (recipient) or taken from one part of a person's body and transferred to another part of the same person's body | en |
| grafted | past of graft | en |
| grafted | A sheet is said to be grafted when it has an ancestor sheet that is a graft | en |
| grafted | [adj ] | en |
| grafted | transplanted; implanted; bribed sıfat | en |
| grafted | adj (of a sheet) Having an ancestor sheet that is a graft | en |
| grafting | Also termed nucleation or implantation Process of inserting a hard bead nucleus or piece of soft mantle tissue into a mollusc body or mantle of the mollusc The nucleus or mantle tissue serves as the 'seed' to irritate the mollusc to produce a pearl | en |
| grafting | The process of creating GroupWise objects in an NDS tree during a migration or when transferring GroupWise objects to another NDS tree | en |
| grafting | A scarfing or endwise attachment of one timber to another | en |
| grafting | The transplanting of a portion of flesh or skin to a denuded surface; autoplasty | en |
| grafting | The transplanting of a portion of flesh or skin to a denuded surface; autoplastic | en |
| grafting | The act, art, or process of inserting grafts | en |
| grafting | The act or method of weaving a cover for a ring, rope end, etc | en |
| grafting | Protecting a rope by weaving yarns together to cover it | en |
| grafting | > A procedure used by vineyards, which marries two pieces of living plant material to form one plant Particularly known for its success as a method in combating Phylloxera, where resistant rootstocks of American origin are grafted onto susceptible varietals | en |
| grafting | Process of reproduction of the plant, by grafting a branch on a selected root stock in order to favour the development of solid vinestock | en |
| grafting | A way to propagate a plant by inserting a section of one plant (the scion) into another plant (the stock) | en |
| grafting | implantation (Horticulture); transplantation isim | en |
| grafting | A propagation technique where a cutting or bud growth from one plant ('scion') is spliced onto a second plant ( 'rootstock') | en |
| grafting | The process of inserting a scion of a specified variety into a tem, root or branch of another plant so that a permanent union is achieved | en |
| grafting | method of making medicated pellets by placing non-medicated pellets in contact with medicated ones Also done with liquid potencies | en |
| grafting | Callus point between two vine shoots An operation made widespread after 1880, after the Phylloxera crisis, on American vinestock | en |
| grafting | A method of inserting a shoot or bud taken from one plant into the stem or branch of another so that the shoot or bud grows and becomes a permanent part of the other plant | en |
| grafts | third-person singular of graft | en |