What's the difference between deracinate and radicate?
Deracinate
Definition:
(v. t.) To pluck up by the roots; to extirpate.
Example Sentences:
(1) That, at least, is the American comedy as seen on TV, in the movies, and in our rather deracinated tradition of standup.
(2) I get a deracinated Kiwi carving a fern in the foam on my flat white.
(3) His tourist-guide zeal is so passionate, you might take him for an exile, a deracinated Lancastrian, rather than for what he really is – an Essex boy, with homes in London and the Cotswolds.
(4) Raskolnikov, the deracinated former law student in Crime and Punishment , is the psychopath of instrumental rationality, who can work up evidently logical reasons to do anything he desires.
(5) Just like any one else, business leaders have a right to a hearing, but they are members of a rarified, deracinated class which persistently – and incorrectly – conflates its own self-interest with the broader economic interest.
(6) And when I read literary novels about deracinated people who operate outside the family unit I just don't get it.
(7) It is just that too much international cooperation has been too technocratic, too deracinated, tending to provoke reaction not partnership.
(8) She never imagined nor expected it to be outside the Co-op.” What follows is a high-octane journey through many touchstones of broken Britain: sexual grooming, vigilantism, ethnic tensions, how education fails those on the fuzzy end of life’s lollipop, how Murdoch deracinated football, how local government autonomy is stymied by Westminster, dementia and post-traumatic stress disorder.
(9) He returned to England to study at the Central School of Speech and Drama in the 1970s, but describes himself as "deracinated".
(10) Denatured and deracinated, the chicken nugget is a symbol of the way we eat now.
(11) I’ve lived on the continent, felt deracinated all my life, get by in three European languages and enjoy encounters that arise from practising them in Britain.
(12) The deracinating process Latin Americans undergo as a result of their migrating to Europe has been occurring approximately for two hundred years now.
(13) In the topsy-turvy chaos of a web world where images and ideas are deracinated, massively projected, manipulated and recycled, Lawson's beachwear has already become iconic – and in a small way, revolutionary.
(14) The study focuses on the deracinating experience effects on the migrants, and how it affects their psychosocial health.
Radicate
Definition:
(a.) Radicated.
(v. i.) To take root; to become rooted.
(v. t.) To cause to take root; to plant deeply and firmly; to root.
Example Sentences:
(1) In conclusion, the efficacy of free tissue transfer in the treatment of osteomyelitis is geared mainly at enabling the surgeon to perform a wide radical debridement of infected and nonviable soft tissue and bone.
(2) The hypothesis that proteins are critical targets in free radical mediated cytolysis was tested using U937 mononuclear phagocytes as targets and iron together with hydrogen peroxide to generate radicals.
(3) These membrane perturbation effects not observed with bleomycin-iron in the presence of a hydroxyl radical scavenger, dimethyl thiourea, or a chelating agent, desferrioxamine, were correlated with the ability of the complex to generate highly reactive oxygen species.
(4) The role of O2 free radicals in the reduction of sarcolemmal Na+-K+-ATPase, which occurs during reperfusion of ischemic heart, was examined in isolated guinea pig heart using exogenous scavengers of O2 radicals and an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase.
(5) Flow cytometric DNA analysis was performed on both fresh and on paraffin embedded samples obtained by gastroscopic biopsies in 5 patients with histologically normal gastric mucosa (20 specimens) and by radical gastrectomies in 9 cases of human gastric cancer (36 specimens).
(6) That's why the big dreams have come from the smaller candidates such as the radical left's Jean-Luc Mélenchon.
(7) Residual cancer was found in the radical prostatectomy specimen in 11 of the 29 stage-A1 patients (38%) and in 66 of the 86 stage-A2 patients (77%).
(8) This may be due to DMSO's ability to scavenge free radicals.
(9) A more radical surgery is recommended but with the limitation that the operative method must be adapted to the operative finding.
(10) The present study explored the possibility that SOD-mimics such as desferrioxamine-Mn(III) chelate [DF-Mn] or cyclic nitroxide stable free radicals could protect from O2-.-independent damage.
(11) Treatment modalities included: partial temporal bone resection, subtotal temporal bone resection, total temporal bone resection, radical mastoidectomy followed by radiation therapy, radiation therapy alone, and chemotherapy.
(12) Leaders of Tory local government are preparing radical proposals for minimum 10% cuts in public spending in the search for savings.
(13) Plays like The Workhouse Donkey (1963) and Armstrong's Last Goodnight (1964) were staged in major theatres, but as the decade progressed so his identification with the increasingly radical climate of the times began to lead away from the mainstream theatre.
(14) 78% of the recurrences were seen two years postoperatively and 27% were asymptomatic; 10% underwent radical operation, 27% palliative operation and 63% conservative treatment.
(15) The kinetics of bimolecular decay of alpha-tocopheroxyl free radicals (T) was studied by ESR mainly in ethanol and heptanol solvents.
(16) While the correlations between speed and accuracy reversed over time, the abnormal vision group began and ended at the most extreme levels, having undergone a significantly more radical shift in this regard.
(17) NPR reported that investigators have not found telltale signs associated with Islamist radicalization , such as a change in mosques or abrupt shifts in behavior or family associations.
(18) The second triplet, which was stable in the dark at 4.2 K following illumination, was assigned to the radical pair Donor+I-.
(19) It may be due to relative nonreactivity of ascorbic acid free radical that free radical chain reactions, found commonly in radical chemistry, do not occur in the scavenging reaction by ascorbic acid.
(20) The free radical scavengers mannitol, thiourea, benzoate, and 4-methylmercapto-2-oxobutyrate protected either native cells exposed to H2O2 or pretreated hepatocytes exposed to H2O2 and given ferric or ferrous iron.