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to uproot
verb
To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate.
Exact(59)
Mercifully, it wasn't enough to uproot "Bunheads".
Some have young families to uproot.
Israel's prime minister says it is to "uproot terrorists".
Now I am having to uproot my two young sons".
Nevertheless, she was never to uproot herself from Scotland.
But women are often less able to uproot themselves.
Explain the quote "an uncompromising war to uproot these savages".
These people have made England their family home; they do not want to uproot them again.
Alex couldn't possibly grasp what it really meant to uproot our family.
But fear, and the awful deeds that fear inspires, are hard to uproot.
The Tamworth pigs had a new fenced-in grazing area to uproot.
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