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the uprooting
verb
To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate.
Exact(60)
Angry demonstrators protested the uprooting.
Fathers, sons, mothers and daughters were motivated by the uprooting of their team from their town.
"This we consider the uprooting of the indigenous people, who will lose their culture and identity.
It was on that date in 1942…that Executive Order 9066 was issued…resulting in the uprooting of loyal Americans….
He warned that with the uprooting of some 250,000 refugees, "thousands could die in the winter".
There is the uprooting of Jewish settlements planted by the Israeli government -- then some 5,800 residents, now 17,000.
Long before such examples there was a grievous, ancient border crossing: the uprooting of Spain's Jews in 1492.
Despite the uprooting in the younger children's lives, their distress is boiled down to a single worrisome quirk for each.
She said she had been trying to prepare for the uprooting of her business and found herself throwing away supplies that she otherwise might have kept.
In 1756 António Dinis da Cruz e Silva established the Arcádia Lusitana (also called the Arcádia Ulissiponense), its first aim being the uprooting of Spanish influence.
The allocation of social housing to newcomers contributed to the uprooting of working-class communities and to the sense that immigrants' needs were being given priority.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com