Used in a Sentence

roots

Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for roots.

Editorial note

Granted, the Civil rights movement was largely grass-roots, but it's not clear to me why a comparison to an insurgency is apt.

Examples15
Definitions3
Parts of speech1

Quick take

Ancestry.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of roots gathered in one view.

noun

Ancestry.

noun

Beginnings; origin.

noun

(of hair) Grown-out hair, often of a grey or natural colour.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for roots.

noun

Ancestry.

noun

Beginnings; origin.

noun

(of hair) Grown-out hair, often of a grey or natural colour.

Example sentences

1

Granted, the Civil rights movement was largely grass-roots, but it's not clear to me why a comparison to an insurgency is apt.

2

Even its GATech roots are easy to overstate (much of its original talent came from Arizona and California).

3

The roots of their respective prosperity and poverty come from the long-term effects of their respective ideologies.

4

To solve the GC problem, the JRI user had to manage handles for global and local roots.

5

So at least some aspects of single-parenthood have ancient roots (indeed, men have always died in war).

6

Time to abandon your recent minimalist and design centered way of thinking and time to go back to your roots...

7

Our team has deep, successful roots in the startup and finance communities.

8

A challenge would be that coffee trees have very deep roots [1].

9

You can recover a tree from pruning its branches but if you over prune the roots it will likely die, similarly you can't let the roots overgrow because they will get over crowded in the small pots.

10

There are deep, deep common roots of race in german culture.

11

Needed to get away from SF and connect with my roots.

12

I remember when the web wasn't littered with all this garbage and I'm happy that we can go back to those roots.

Quote examples

1

My "homophobia" (the Greek roots make no sense) justifies nothing in what you think was the just-desserts outcome at Mozilla, even if your school-child Marxoid morality tale version of that event were accurate (and it's not).

2

Your argument presumes an inference of the definition from the etymology, which would perhaps not be an unreasonable approach if you were a future archeologist stumbling on the fragmentary remains of our society and the only information you had for interpreting the modern English word "feminism" was an idea of its linguistic roots.

3

But I'd like to consider coders as less calculating and more socialist that allows people from non-traditional backgrounds make the effort to join the ranks; and also heed to its "blue collar" technical roots than try to aspire to be elitist like doctors or lawyers.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use roots in a sentence?

Granted, the Civil rights movement was largely grass-roots, but it's not clear to me why a comparison to an insurgency is apt.

What does roots mean?

Ancestry.

What part of speech is roots?

roots is commonly used as noun.