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Discover LudwigSuggestions(5)
Idiom
Take root.
If something like an idea or system takes root, it becomes established, accepted or believed.
Exact(9)
"And let some of these new reforms begin to take root before we have this conversation".
As for the cease-fire, brokered by the Americans in mid-June, there has been not a day when it could truly begin to take root.
Moss and ivy warm high-rises and wildflowers decorate sidewalk cracks, as all variety of gardens and greenery begin to take root in the city, along with a fleet of budding gardeners, truly transforming it into an Emerald City that is oasis, playground and canvas — check out those topiaries!
Saying a solution involved "how these countries teach their youth," Obama said: "What our military operations can do is to just check and roll back these (militant) networks as they appear and make sure that the time and space is provided for a new way of doing things to begin to take root".
Once the kinks are worked out with DARwIn and useful open-source tweaks begin to take root, it will be time to jump to larger robots that can navigate stairs and light fixtures without modifications.
Read together: The effects of reading to children can begin to take root at a very early age.
Similar(49)
A new, democratic aesthetic began to take root.
A green consciousness is beginning to take root in Hawaii.
Indeed, as the water flowed, Christianity began to take root.
They began to take root sometime after the elevated highway was closed to traffic eight years ago.
But as the grass begins to take root, so does a resilient Occupy Charlotte.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com