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1. (v.t.) transplant
to remove (a plant) from one place and plant it in another.
2. transplant
to transfer (an organ, tissue, etc.) from one part of the body to another or from one person or animal to another.
3. transplant
to move from one place to another.
4. transplant
to bring from one country, region, etc., to another for settlement; relocate.
5. (v.i.) transplant
to undergo or accept transplanting.
6. (n.) transplant
the act or process of transplanting.
7. transplant
a plant, organ, person, etc., that has been transplanted.
Etymology: (1400–50; < LL trānsplantāre= L trāns-trans - +plantāre to plant)
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| Definition of 'Transplant' |
Princeton's WordNet |
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1. (noun) graft, transplant
(surgery) tissue or organ transplanted from a donor to a recipient; in some cases the patient can be both donor and recipient
2. (noun) transplant, transplantation, organ transplant
an operation moving an organ from one organism (the donor) to another (the recipient)
"he had a kidney transplant"; "the long-term results of cardiac transplantation are now excellent"; "a child had a multiple organ transplant two months ago"
3. (verb) transplant, transplantation, transplanting
the act of removing something from one location and introducing it in another location
"the transplant did not flower until the second year"; "too frequent transplanting is not good for families"; "she returned to Alabama because she could not bear transplantation"
4. (verb) transplant, transfer
lift and reset in another soil or situation
"Transplant the young rice plants"
5. (verb) transplant
be transplantable
"These delicate plants do not transplant easily"
6. (verb) transplant, graft
place the organ of a donor into the body of a recipient
7. (verb) transfer, transpose, transplant
transfer from one place or period to another
"The ancient Greek story was transplanted into Modern America"
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1. (verb) transplant
(of a body organ) to take out of one person's body and put into another person's body
to transplant a kidney
2. transplant
(of a plant) to move to a different place
Some plants do not do well if they are transplanted.
3. (noun) transplant
the medical operation in which a body organ is transplanted
a kidney/heart transplant; organs needed for transplant
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| Definition of 'Transplant' |
Webster Dictionary |
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1. (verb) Transplant
to remove, and plant in another place; as, to transplant trees
2. (verb) Transplant
to remove, and settle or establish for residence in another place; as, to transplant inhabitants
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Sense: to remove (an organ of the body) and put it into another person or animal
Doctors are able to transplant kidneys.
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Afrikaans: oorplant |
Arabic: يَنْقُلُ عُضوا من جِسْم و |
Bulgarian: присаждам |
Brazilian: transplantar |
Czech: transplantovat |
German: transplantieren |
Danish: transplantere |
Greek: μεταμοσχεύω |
Spanish: trasplantar |
Estonian: siirdama |
Farsi: پیوند زدن |
Finnish: siirtää |
French: transplanter, greffer |
Hebrew: לְהַשתִיל |
Hindi: दूसरे स्थान पर लगाना |
Croatian: presaditi |
Hungarian: átültet |
Indonesian: mencangkok |
Icelandic: græða (í/á) |
Italian: trapiantare |
Japanese: 移植する |
Korean: (기관 등을) 이식하다 |
Lithuanian: persodinti |
Latvian: pārstādīt |
Malay: memindahkan |
Dutch: transplanteren |
Norwegian: transplantere |
Polish: przeszczepiać |
Persian: پیوند زدن |
Pashto: پیوند کول |
Portuguese: transplantar |
Romanian: a transplanta, a grefa |
Russian: делать пересадку (органа) |
Slovak: transplantovať |
Slovenian: presaditi |
Serbian: izvršiti transplantaciju |
Swedish: transplantera |
Thai: ปลูกถ่าย |
Turkish: organ nakletmek |
Taiwanese: 移植(器管) |
Ukrainian: робити пересадку; транспл |
Urdu: اعضاء کي پيوند کاري کرنا |
Vietnamese: cấy, ghép |
Chinese: 移植(器管) |
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