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Noun
The Trump administration wants the firings challenged to get the Supreme Court to hold that the president can fire anyone within the executive branch, stripping civil servants of protections fundamentally designed to fight patronage and graft.—Noah Feldman, Twin Cities, 30 Jan. 2025 At 30 days after implantation, nearly 92 percent of the vessels remained open and functioning, compared with 79 percent for synthetic grafts.—Emily Mullin, WIRED, 29 Jan. 2025
Verb
But there’s at least the chance that graft on the industrial scale at which Madigan operated is history.—The Editorial Board, Chicago Tribune, 12 Feb. 2025 By then, doctors should be done with removing burns and will progress to closing wounds and grafting skin, Foster said.—CBS News, 6 Jan. 2025 See all Example Sentences for graft
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1) and Verb (1)
Middle English graffe, grafte, from Anglo-French greffe, graife stylus, graph, from Medieval Latin graphium, from Latin, stylus, from Greek grapheion, from graphein to write — more at carve
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