take root Definition
Dictionary Home » Words Starting with T » take advice ... take something into consideration » take root
root1
noun
- 1a. bot.
- In vascular plants: the descending structure, lacking leaves and chlorophyll, that usually grows beneath the soil surface, and whose function is to anchor the plant in the soil and to absorb water and mineral nutrients;
- Any of the branches of this structure;
- Example: root vegetable
3. anatomy.
- The embedded part of eg a tooth, hair, nail or similar structure.
- Example: the root of the problem
- Thesaurus: origin, source, starting point, beginnings, stem, derivation, cause, basis, essence, nucleus, germ, seed, heart.
- Example: the root cause
- Thesaurus: beginnings, origins, heritage, background, family.
- Form: roots
- Example: go back to one's roots
- Thesaurus: home, birthplace.
- Form: roots
- The basic element in a word which remains after all affixes have been removed, and which may form the basis of a number of related words, eg love is the root of lovable, lovely, lover and unloved. See also stem.
- A factor of a quantity that, when multiplied by itself a specified number of times, produces that quantity, eg 2 is the square root of 4 and the cube root of 8.
- In an algebraic equation: the value or values of an unknown quantity or variable that represent the solution to that equation. Also called solution.
- In harmony: the fundamental note on which a chord is built.
- intr
1. To grow roots.
intr
2. To become firmly established.
- Thesaurus: establish, set, fix, implant, anchor, embed, ground, entrench, sink, moor.
- Form: root something up (usually)
- Form: root something out
5. To provide something with roots.
(Austral & NZ)
tr & intr
6. coarse slang
- To have sexual intercourse with someone.
- With no roots.
- With no fixed home; wandering.
adj
- To find its underlying cause.
- Thoroughly; completely.
- To grow roots.
- To become firmly established.
- Thesaurus: grow, start, commence.
Phrasal Verb: root something out
- To remove or destroy it completely.
