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View definitions for deracination

deracination

noun as in displacement

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Example Sentences

The Barrington revival embraces that denuding and deracination, which is nice for the eyes if not for the drama.

In its place we get the milder problem of deracination, since she will have to move to Hemant’s home in the States: Can she learn to love New Jersey?

In her book, “The Parthenon,” published in 2002, she wrote that the temple has come to stand for deracination, dismemberment, desire and loss.

It’s really Felicity who functions as our protagonist, as we witness her dogged, creative pursuit of justice, despite all the deracination she experiences.

The effort to link abortion with eugenics and deracination is part of a longer-range strategy to destabilize and eventually overrule Roe.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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