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Example sentences for "transplant"

Lexicographically close words:
transpiration; transpire; transpired; transpires; transpiring; transplantation; transplanted; transplanting; transplants; transpontine
  1. And here I will abide till the great Master of the Vineyard think fit to transplant me.

  2. Then when the Corn is grown about a span high, the Women come and weed it, and pull it up where it grew too thick, and transplant it where it wants.

  3. Some will transplant them out of the Woods into their Gardens to serve them instead of a Clock, when it is cloudy that they cannot see the Sun.

  4. The potatoes, kept moist at this temperature, sprout promptly and will be ready to transplant in about six weeks.

  5. Can you transplant trees two years old with safety to another location in same grove, same soil; etc.

  6. Can I transplant fruit trees 2 to 3 inches through the butt, about one foot from the ground?

  7. Transplant during the dormant season (as shown by absence of leaves) when the soil is in good condition.

  8. Strawberry plants are never dormant till midwinter, and there is no plant more difficult to transplant when roots are disturbed in the hot season, which usually prevails in the interior valleys of California.

  9. What is the best time to transplant seedlings of the black walnut?

  10. It is questionable if there is any gain in time from seed to fruit by this method, but it enables one to get older plants of a size which it is practicable to transplant to the field.

  11. I think it better to set the full distance apart at first, not to transplant a second time.

  12. Transplant gooseberries and currants, and plant strawberries and raspberries: they will then be rooted before winter, and flourish the succeeding season.

  13. Transplant columbines, monkshood, and all kinds of fibrous rooted perennials.

  14. Sow Cos and imperial lettuce, and transplant the finer kinds.

  15. Transplant cabbage plants and coleworts, where they are to remain.

  16. Transplant the cauliflowers sown in May, give them a rich bed, and frequent waterings.

  17. In the last week transplant hardy flowering shrubs, and they will be strong the next summer.

  18. Transplant all garden trees for flowering, prune currant bushes, and preserve the stones of the fruit for sowing.

  19. Transplant perennial flowers and evergreens, as in the former months; take up the roots of colchichams, and other autumnal bulbous plants.

  20. Transplant cabbages, plant out Silesia and Cos lettuce from the beds where they grew in winter, and plant potatoes and Jerusalem artichokes.

  21. Transplant perennial flowers, and hardy shrubs, Canterbury bells, lilacs, and the like.

  22. Transplant the lettuces sown last month, where they can be defended by a reed fence, or under a wall.

  23. Transplant fruit trees to places where they are wanted.

  24. Transplant honeysuckles and spireas, with other hardy flowering shrubs.

  25. Why should we not transplant this bit of woodland glory to the garden, and heighten the effect of it by giving it an evergreen as a background?

  26. Later on, when you come across a plant that seems a desirable addition to your collection, mark the place where it grows, and transplant to the home grounds in fall, after its leaves have ripened.

  27. His fine form, his generous spirit, and his noble qualities, are preserved upon the Columbia river; and certainly it is worthy the experiment to endeavour to transplant him into other parts of the United States.

  28. In the meridian of New York, Mr. Cobbett says that from the 26th of July until some of the first days in August, is the proper time to transplant this crop, the plants for the purpose being previously grown.

  29. If it is desirable still further to check their growth, or harden them, transplant into another cold frame, allowing each plant double the distance it before occupied.

  30. Transplant when three or four inches high, being very careful not to let the plants get tall and weak.

  31. Gently pull away the earth from the roots of such with the fingers, and draw around fresh earth; or, what is as well or better, transplant a healthy plant just on the edge of the hill.

  32. When the plants are finger high they are of a good size to transplant into such hills as have missed, or to market.

  33. The Jewish thinker, Ibn-Gebirol, was the first to transplant it again to Europe, and he built an altar to it in Spain, where it found a permanent habitation.

  34. It is well, however, to transplant them into a gradually cooler and freer atmosphere in order to harden them off, so that they may go into the open ground without danger.

  35. The native Ferns transplant easily to the garden, and they make an attractive addition to the side of a house, or as an admixture in a hardy border.

  36. Transplant on a cloudy day, and just before a rain, if possible.

  37. One of the recent methods of obtaining extra large bulbs from seed is to sow the seed in a hotbed in February or early March, and transplant to the open ground in April.

  38. Sow in a border or seed box and transplant to the garden in early summer; and the following year a crop may be had.

  39. It is well to transplant them once or twice before they are finally set in the field, especially if they are started, in New York, as early as the first or middle of March.

  40. It is ordinarily unsafe to transplant them in the fall in northern climates or bleak situations, since the evaporation from the foliage during the winter is likely to injure the plant.

  41. Transplant in the fall, if convenient, although spring planting may be equally successful.

  42. In transplanting, care should always be taken not to transplant too early, or in improper weather; for if the weather happens to be cold or wet, the tender plants will suffer very much, and probably fail.

  43. Sow lettuce and small salad and radishes; also transplant lettuces to situations to stand till the spring.

  44. Equally so it is an indubitable economic fact that the landowner finds it more profitable to plant or transplant corn, potatoes, grass, strawberries, etc.

  45. It is necessary to take them out, to transplant them into pots with richly manured soil, and to give them all the care that should be given to weak and sickly plants.

  46. In making experiments upon this point it is necessary to transplant the divergent individuals to a garden in order to furnish them proper cultural conditions and to keep them under constant observation.

  47. Not so easily can a man tear up the roots of his old life, and transplant himself into a new soil and a foreign atmosphere.

  48. Depart from the highway and transplant thyself in some enclosed ground; for it is hard for a tree that stands by the wayside to keep her fruit till it be ripe.

  49. It is entertaining practice to transplant the plants into pots, if you happen to have any florist's pots of small size.

  50. After the true leaves appear, if the plants seem crowded and uncomfortable, like three boys trying to sleep in a narrow bed, transplant them into other flats prepared similarly to the one into which the seeds were sown.

  51. Continue making pipings of Carnation, plant out, or transplant hardy perennials into the borders.

  52. About November 1 we transplant the plants into cold frames, six inches apart each way, as we wish to keep them growing a little all winter.

  53. We sow in November in cold frame, keep well thinned out under glass until about the 20th of January, then transplant to the open ground, cultivating well with frequent watering if the weather should be dry.

  54. It would not be an undertaking of five, of ten, nor of twenty years, to transplant these nations; that misfortunes and proscription would not only inspire courage and obstinacy, but desperation.

  55. Intelligence, however, is required to plant nuts and to transplant nut trees.

  56. It is well known that trees with many transplantings, root injuries, transplant much more readily, and the nurserymen use this method of stimulation as a routine procedure.

  57. I learn in Florida that in order to transplant a good size palmetto, they are in the habit of digging down on one side and cutting the roots the year before removal.

  58. In the Southern States of America, the negroes consider it unlucky to transplant Parsley from an old home to a new one.

  59. Young trees have large, deep roots, and are difficult to transplant successfully unless they have been frequently transplanted in nurseries, from which, however, they are seldom obtainable.

  60. Seldom offered in nurseries and difficult to transplant unless frequently root-pruned or moved; collected plants do not thrive well; seedlings are raised with little difficulty.

  61. A rich Jewish merchant of Marseille, named Isaac Altaras, came to Russia with a proposal to transplant a certain number of Jews to Algiers, which had recently passed under French rule.

  62. A suggestion was also made to transplant the Jews with their own money, i.

  63. When they are of two or three years growth, you may transplant them where you please; and when they have gotten good root, they will make prodigious shoots, but not for the three or four first years comparatively.

  64. I am ever blest with a coadjutress, a directress let me rather say, formed under such auspices, with what delight shall I transplant the principles and practices of Stanley Grove to the Priory!

  65. You have my cordial wishes for your success," said he, "though I shall lament the day when you snatch so fair a flower from our fields, to transplant it into your northern gardens.


  66. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "transplant" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.