Definition of Ingraftment. Meaning of Ingraftment. Synonyms of Ingraftment

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Ingraftment. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Ingraftment and, of course, Ingraftment synonyms and on the right images related to the word Ingraftment.

Definition of Ingraftment

Ingraftment
Ingraftment In*graft"ment, n. 1. The act of ingrafting. 2. The thing ingrafted; a scion.

Meaning of Ingraftment from wikipedia

- people of the United States to su****de the confederation, and not to be ingrafted on it, as a stock through which it was to receive life and nourishment...
- over 500 years of Germano-Latin bilingualism, many Germanic words became ingrafted into the Gallo-Romance speech by the time it emerged as Old French in...
- the way. His object was not to set aside but to moderate Calvinism by ingrafting this doctrine upon the particularism of election, and thereby to fortify...
- and so general amongst us is here entirely harmless by the invention of ingrafting (which is the term they give it). There is a set of old women who make...
- Haviland. 1638. The Soul's Humiliation. International Outreach. The Soul's Ingrafting into Christ. 1637. The Soul's Preparation for Christ: Or, A Treatise of...
- official investments during the South Sea Bubble crisis. He conceived the 'ingraftment scheme', under which the Bank of England and the East India Company would...
- the Management of the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, and ingrafting the same on the Three Pounds per Centum Reduced Annuities, in Redemption...
- 1. St. 1. c. 5 23 March 1721 An Act to enable the South Sea Company to ingraft Part of their Capital Stock and Fund into the Stock and Fund of the Bank...
- They also shared an interest in ingrafting, an early form of inoculation, particularly in relation to smallpox. Ingrafting was considered a heresy by New...
- arrect "set upright; direct upward" (from Latin ad- "to") or insititious "ingrafted; inserted" potency (from Latin insitio "to implant; to graft"). Interpreting...