0 to replace:
1 to take the place of (something or someone):
Travel videos do not supplant guidebooks, but they can be useful when planning a trip.
But, as the population burgeoned in recent decades, traditional economies faltered and were supplanted by agricultural production reliant on few species.
The paper concludes with brief review of three leading explanations of why neoclassicism seems to have been supplanted by a new mainstream pluralism.
By the late nineteenth century, the role of church groups in founding and maintaining such institutions had largely been supplanted by the state.
The first originated in the 1850s and involved attempts to supplant existing verbal agreements made at the hirings with written 'characters' administered through registration societies.
These old circuits were neither eliminated nor supplanted, but still play a role at some level of the language processes.
The real is evinced by the absence of the real - in this case by the cyborg woman's replaced and supplanted limbs and organs.
Descartes intends the big-picture theodicy to supplement, rather than supplant, the free-will theodicy.
It often happens that a textbook off the shelf quickly supplants a sketchy syllabus which may have taken much effort to produce.