Used in a Sentence

uprooted

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

Editorial note

Should they be uprooted every year (or more often) because someone wants to make a bit more money?

Examples17
Definitions2
Parts of speech1

Quick take

(figurative, by extension) Having been removed from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly.

Meaning at a glance

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

adjective

(figurative, by extension) Having been removed from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly.

adjective

(of a plant) Having been fully removed, including the roots.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for uprooted.

adjective

(figurative, by extension) Having been removed from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly.

adjective

(of a plant) Having been fully removed, including the roots.

Example sentences

1

Should they be uprooted every year (or more often) because someone wants to make a bit more money?

2

People who have roots are getting uprooted because they declined or couldn't get in on the sweet tech boom dollars.

3

For a lot of old people, relinquishing their homes means losing memories and likely being uprooted from the community they belong to, which is what they really care about.

4

Can someone help me understand what effect would be had if Google did exactly what these people wanted and uprooted to elsewhere?

5

>Should they be uprooted every year (or more often) because someone wants to make a bit more money?

6

In design terminology I saw, missile equals tree uprooted by tornado (not chemically explosive).

7

> Should they be uprooted every year (or more often) because someone wants to make a bit more money?

8

Its understandable she's bitter about it; who wouldn't be if they were driving a project at a company they liked working for, and then its all uprooted?

9

You didn't move yet, you haven't burned any bridges in your network, you have skills that are in demand, you have not uprooted your life for them.

10

You can't cut and disperse the cancer growing inside of the US Government and expect anything to be solved or fixed, it needs to be uprooted and burned.

11

What is firmly established cannot be uprooted.

12

Certainly I don't think we've abandoned social groups, but I do think they've been uprooted from the geographic association they once were required to have.

Quote examples

1

The world doesn't revolve around families that "shouldn't be uprooted and have their lives thrown into disorder".

2

Few of us have any "root" in the Bay Area, so we couldn't care less about being uprooted [1].

3

And "most evidence suggests that the rain-forst mindset is more of a hosthouse attribute, less hardy when uprooted." I'm not doing him justice.

4

C is de facto portable in the sense "able to be actually ported" by having the tools --- but possibly at the cost of combing the code for nonportabilities that have to be uprooted.

Proper noun examples

1

Uprooted because I glazed over that word in my reply, and it does alter the point.

Frequently asked questions

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

How do you use uprooted in a sentence?

Should they be uprooted every year (or more often) because someone wants to make a bit more money?

What does uprooted mean?

(figurative, by extension) Having been removed from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly.

What part of speech is uprooted?

uprooted is commonly used as adjective.