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Noun
All-encompassing graft has turned a strong but unspectacular young player, who at one stage seemed good enough only for the Swedish first division, into a goal-scoring phenomenon at the top level of the club game.—Greg O'Keeffe, New York Times, 28 July 2025 The animal hospital worked with a company that makes grafts of fish skin that can regenerate tissue.—Madeline Heim, jsonline.com, 26 July 2025
Verb
Leave all the new growth, as azaleas are not grafted plants, but grown from cuttings.—Tom MacCubbin, The Orlando Sentinel, 2 Aug. 2025 Gum surgery: For severe gum recession or exposed tooth root, surgeons harvest tissue from another part of the mouth and graft it to the affected areas.—Mark Gurarie, Health, 21 June 2025 See All Example Sentences for graft
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1) and Verb (1)
Middle English graffe, grafte, from Anglo-French greffe, graife stylus, graph, from Medieval Latin graphium, from Latin, stylus, from Greek grapheion, from graphein to write — more at carve
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