grafted
v. <农>移植( graft的过去式和过去分词 ); 嫁接; 使(思想、制度等)成为(…的一部份); 植根
A graft is a piece of healthy skin or bone, or a healthy organ, which is attached to a damaged part of your body by a medical operation in order to replace it.
I am having a skin graft on my arm soon.
我马上就要接受手臂的皮肤移植手术。
If a piece of healthy skin or bone or a healthy organ is grafted onto a damaged part of your body, it is attached to that part of your body by a medical operation.
The top layer of skin has to be grafted onto the burns.
必须将表层皮肤移植到烫伤处。
If a part of one plant or tree is grafted onto another plant or tree, they are joined together so that they will become one plant or tree, often in order to produce a new variety.
Pear trees are grafted on quince rootstocks.
梨树被嫁接到榅的根茎上。
If you graft one idea or system on to another, you try to join one to the other.
The Japanese tried to graft their own methods on to this different structure.
日本人试图将自己的方法移植到这种不同的体制中。
Graft means hard work.
His career has been one of hard graft.
他从事的职业劳动强度很大。
In politics, graft is used to refer to the activity of using power or authority to obtain money dishonestly.
...another politician accused of graft.
又一位被控贪污的政界人物
The top layer of skin has to be grafted onto the burns.
必须将表层皮肤移植到烫伤处。
Pear trees are grafted on quince rootstocks.
梨树被嫁接到榅的根茎上。
Apples are easily grafted.
苹果树很容易嫁接.
Three or four ramets of each selected tree are grafted.
对选择出来的每一棵优株都嫁接繁殖3-4个分株.
The grafted trees generally bear good crops at young ages.
这种嫁接植株一般在幼龄期便能盛产种子.