0 past simple and past participle of uproot --
2 to remove a person from their home or usual environment: --
The war has uprooted nearly two thirds of the country's population.
Likewise, land privatisation and labour creation reforms uprooted pre-liberal land systems based on communal ownership and the protection of ecclesiastical properties.
At this stage, the sugarcane is uprooted and replanted.
Percentage unambiguously due to chowchillas is the sum of those broken, uprooted and buried.
Uprooted trees were more likely to push over other canopy trees than trees which had died standing or snapped.
Of these 90 seedlings, 26% were either uprooted completely or were represented by a leafless stem.
Thirty-four per cent of the trees were uprooted, 35% had snapped, 15% had died standing and 16% were unclassified.
These disturbances result in snapped trunks and uprooted trees which create gaps in the forest canopy that allow light to penetrate into the understorey.
The beans were uprooted and burnt outside the experiment.