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graft

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graft

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Hospital, Gardening, Agriculture
graft1 /ɡrɑːft $ ɡræft/ noun  1 [countable]MH a piece of healthy skin or bone taken from someone’s body and put in or on another part of their body that has been damaged 移植的皮肤;移植的骨骼 Martha had to have several skin grafts. 玛莎不得不进行了多处皮肤移植。2. [countable]DLGTA a piece cut from one plant and tied to or put inside a cut in another, so that it grows there 〔嫁接用的〕接穗3 [uncountable] especially British English informalWORK HARD hard work 艰苦的工作 Our success has been due to sheer hard graft. 我们的成功全凭努力得来。4 [uncountable] especially American EnglishDISHONEST the practice of obtaining money or advantage by the dishonest use of influence or power 贪污,受贿;以权谋私 He promised to end graft in public life. 他承诺要清除公务生活中的腐败行为。
Examples from the Corpus
graftAbout 40 percent of her diseased liver was removed and replaced with a graft from a healthy liver.In Springfield you could tell real fast which men were there for girls, games, and graft.People once accepted government greed and graft with a shrug of resignation.Murders, theft, rape, calumnies, graft - our daily bread.Stevens was in court yesterday facing charges of graft and tax evasion.A major investigation is underway to root out graft there, he said.A major investigation is under way to root out graft there, they said.I've got gravel wounds in my back and my leg hurts where they took a skin graft.About 30 % of such grafts fail in two to five years and 50 % within 10 years.skin graftsJay Burns has undergone 18 skin grafts since the horrible accident three years ago, an accident that nearly destroyed his life.hard graftHorses are not stupid and will soon grasp how to avoid hard graft!All you need is £8,000 and about two months hard graft, as one Clwyd farmer found out.A mere £8,000, plus two months of hard graft.It's hard graft getting it out of her.The bomb and the bullet of course provide more dramatic reportage than hard graft, the golf club and fishing rod.You're standing hunched up with the dull awareness of the hard graft.The hard graft may be persuading him or her to do the job.
Related topics: Hospital, Gardening, Agriculture
graft2 verb  1 [transitive]MH to remove a piece of skin, bone etc from part of someone’s body and put it onto or into a part of their body that has been damaged 移植〔皮肤、骨骼等〕graft something onto/to something The technique involves grafting a very thin slice of bone onto the damaged knee. 这种技术是把非常薄的骨片移植到受伤的膝盖上去。2. [transitive + on/onto]DLGTA to join a part of a plant or tree onto another plant or tree 嫁接3 MIX[transitive] to add something very different to something, so that it becomes part of it 引入,加入graft something onto something New elements are being grafted onto our traditional form of government. 我们传统的政府模式正被注入新的元素。graft something on It is a 17th-century farmhouse with some Victorian additions grafted on. 这是一座17世纪的农舍,后来又加盖了一些维多利亚时代风格的房子。4. [intransitive] especially British English informalWORK HARD to work hard 努力地工作5.graft off somebody phrasal verb American English DISHONESTto get money or advantages from someone by the dishonest use of influence, especially political influence 〔尤指利用权势以不正当手段〕向〔某人〕索贿,牟取私利
→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
graftI made a note to myself to come back in early spring to get scions for grafting.Kallicharran took nearly two and a half hours over 34, while Fredericks was grafting away at the other end.By grafting in another eyecup another lens can be induced to form from the overlying layer.If they are grafted on to existing vocational education-representing a change in name only-we will be worse off than when we started.The political parade was grafted onto the Frontier Days celebration.If one could only graft the best aspects of Scimone and Devos on to one another, the roof would really lift off!After being grafted, the joints are dipped into paraffin wax for protection.They grafted themselves, in fact, on to a much older, more primitive and powerful religious life.Husbands and wives were bound by deep ties-like two branches grafted together.graft something onto somethingClippings from the tree are being grafted onto existing seedlings.Doctors grafted skin from Mike's arm onto his face where it was burned.
From Longman Business Dictionarygraftgraft1 /grɑːftgræft/ noun [uncountable]1British English informal hard workHe put his success down to stamina, resilience, and sheer hard graft.2especially American English when money or advantage is obtained by using power or influence in a dishonest wayThe whole system is full of corruption and graft.graftgraft2 verb British English informal to work hard graft something onto something→ See Verb tableOrigin graft1 (1400-1500) graff graft ((14-19 centuries)), from Old French grafe pencil, graft, from Greek graphein to write; because a plant graft looks like a pencil
Corpus skin or of healthy piece a Business


graft
I
graft1 /ɡrɑːft $ ɡræft/ noun
 Date: 1400-1500
 Origin: graff 'graft' (14-19 centuries), from Old French grafe 'pencil, graft', from Greek graphein 'to write'; because a plant graft looks like a pencil
1. [countable] a piece of healthy skin or bone taken from someone’s body and put in or on another part of their body that has been damaged:
    Martha had to have several skin grafts.
2. [countable] a piece cut from one plant and tied to or put inside a cut in another, so that it grows there
3. [uncountable] especially British English informal hard work:
    Our success has been due to sheer hard graft.
4. [uncountable] especially American English the practice of obtaining money or advantage by the dishonest use of influence or power:
    He promised to end graft in public life.

II
graft2 verb
1. [transitive] to remove a piece of skin, bone etc from part of someone’s body and put it onto or into a part of their body that has been damaged
    graft something onto/to something
    The technique involves grafting a very thin slice of bone onto the damaged knee.
2. [transitive + on/onto] to join a part of a plant or tree onto another plant or tree
3. [transitive] to add something very different to something, so that it becomes part of it
    graft something onto something
    New elements are being grafted onto our traditional form of government.
    graft something on
    It is a 17th-century farmhouse with some Victorian additions grafted on.
4. [intransitive] especially British English informal to work hard
     
graft off somebody phrasal verb American English
  to get money or advantages from someone by the dishonest use of influence, especially political influence


graftBrE /ɡrɑːft/ 🔊NAmE /ɡræft/ 🔊 noun [countable] a piece cut from a living plant and fixed in a cut made in another plant, so that it grows there; the process or result of doing this 接穗;嫁接 [countable] a piece of skin, bone, etc. removed from a living body and placed in another part of the body which has been damaged; the process or result of doing this 移植物,移植片(皮肤或骨骼等);移植a skin graft皮移植物

amputate, anaesthetic, graft, operation, procedure, scalpel, scrubs, stitch, surgery, transplant

[uncountable] (BrE, informal) hard work 艰苦的工作Their success was the result of years of hard graft. 他们的成功是多年艰苦奋斗的结果。🔊🔊 [uncountable] (especially NAmE) the use of illegal or unfair methods, especially bribery, to gain advantage in business, politics, etc.; money obtained in this way 行贿;贿赂;受贿;赃款
graftBrE /ɡrɑːft/ 🔊NAmE /ɡræft/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they graft BrE /ɡrɑːft/ 🔊 NAmE /ɡræft/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it grafts BrE /ɡrɑːfts/ 🔊 NAmE /ɡræfts/ 🔊past simple grafted BrE /ˈɡrɑːftɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɡræftɪd/ 🔊past participle grafted BrE /ˈɡrɑːftɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɡræftɪd/ 🔊 -ing form grafting BrE /ˈɡrɑːftɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɡræftɪŋ/ 🔊 [transitive] ~ sth (onto/to/into sth) | ~ sth (on) (from sth) to take a piece of skin, bone, etc. from one part of the body and attach it to a damaged part 移植(皮肤、骨骼等)newly grafted tissue新移植的组织New skin had to be grafted on from his back. 需从他的背部移植新皮肤。🔊🔊 [transitive] ~ sth (onto sth) to cut a piece from a living plant and attach it to another plant 嫁接 [transitive] ~ sth (onto sth) to make one idea, system, etc. become part of another one 使(思想、制度等)成为(…的一部分);植根Old values are being grafted onto a new social class. 旧的价值观念正植根于新的社会阶层。🔊🔊 [intransitive] (BrE, informal) to work hard 卖力地工作