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transplanting

[ US /tɹænsˈpɫæntɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /tɹænsplˈæntɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of removing something from one location and introducing it in another location
    she returned to Alabama because she could not bear transplantation
    the transplant did not flower until the second year
    too frequent transplanting is not good for families

How To Use transplanting In A Sentence

  • So now you have 2 great methods for successfully transplanting rose bushes.
  • A BQ-HTJ-I-type precise spinal cord cell transplantation device mainly applied to the medical field can complete various cell transplanting operations in the spinal cord safely and quickly.
  • When transplanting, be certain not to cover the crown of your plants as this will cause them to rot and die.
  • Digging and weeding and planting and tending my flowers, all this serves some primitive instinct, so that I feel much more like a pig rooting for truffles than a woman staking her delphiniums, or pulling up witchgrass, or transplanting phlox from a shady to a sunny spot. No More Words
  • After transplanting the tale to Liège, they sought to dramatize how a father might cope with the temptation to take revenge.
  • Police today issued a safety warning after reports of increased car engine " transplanting".
  • Scientists hope to someday cure disease by transplanting healthy stem cells into sick people.
  • He also advised sifting the seedling soil mixture because they will tend to attach to large bits of bark for the moisture and it is very easy to damage tem when transplanting.
  • Transplanting cord blood stem cells from placenta and umbilical cords have the same effect as a bone-marrow transplant.
  • The hypothesis that these anomalous effects could result from the release by neoplastic cells of a soluble, diffusible agent which altered the differentiative and growth properties of its target cells, received full confirmation from experiments transplanting one or the other mouse sarcoma onto the chorio-allantoic membrane of 4 to 6-day chick embryos, in such a position as to prevent direct contact between embryonic and neoplastic tissues (Fig. 2). Nobel Lecture The Nerve Growth Factor: Thirty-Five Years Later
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