| supplant | To overthrow, undermine, or force away, in order to get a substitute in place of | en |
| supplant | to uproot, to remove violently | en |
| supplant | to replace, to take the place of to supersede | en |
| supplant | If a person or thing is supplanted, another person or thing takes their place. He may be supplanted by a younger man By the 1930s the wristwatch had almost completely supplanted the pocket watch. = usurp. to take the place of a person or thing so that they are no longer used, no longer in a position of power etc = replace (supplanter, from supplantare , from planta ) | en |
| supplant | take the place or move into the position of; "Smith replaced Miller as CEO after Miller left"; "the computer has supplanted the slide rule"; "Mary replaced Susan as the team's captain and the highest-ranked player in the school" | en |
| supplant | To remove or displace by stratagem; to displace and take the place of; to supersede; as, a rival supplants another in the favor of a mistress or a prince | en |
| supplant | To trip up | en |
| supplant | take the place of in an underhanded or scheming manner, overthrow, usurp; replace one thing with another fiil | en |
| supplanted | past of supplant | en |
| supplanting | act of taking the place of another especially using underhanded tactics | en |
| supplanting | present participle of supplant | en |
| supplants | third-person singular of supplant | en |