¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Engrafts
1. engraft [v] - See also: engraft
Lexicographical Neighbors of Engrafts
Literary usage of Engrafts
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Anglo-Norman Metrical Chronicle of Geoffrey Gaimar by Geoffroy Gaimar, Thomas Wright (1850)
"... evidently was with English traditions, and how often he engrafts them upon
the ordinary chronicles which he translated. THE END. ..."
2. The School World (1905)
"the B.Lit. or B.Sc. who subsequently engrafts a wider education on his special
knowledge by taking the course in general education. TUP: REV. ST. ..."
3. The Evils of Infant Baptism by Robert Boyte Crawford Howell, Southern Baptist Publication Society (1852)
"CHAPTER III, INFANT BAPTISM IS AN EVIL BECAUSE IT engrafts JUDAISM UPON THE GOSPEL
OF CHRIST. Form of church organization; ..."
4. Evils of Dr. Howell's Book on the "Evils of Infant Baptism.": A Review by E. McMillan, Robert Boyte Crawford Howell (1855)
""INFANT BAPTISM: is AN EVIL; BECAUSE IT engrafts JUDAISM UPON THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST.
THE word Judaism is usually employed to denote all the ordinances and ..."
5. The Expositor edited by Samuel Cox, Sir W Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt (1911)
"Because he has been a wild olive tree bearing none of the fruits of righteousness
he anoints him with oil and thus engrafts on him the fire * of the ..."
6. The Mercersburg Review by Alumni Association, Franklin and Marshall College (1871)
"He, therefore, alone engrafts men into Christ. This St. Paul brings out, where
he refers to the good olive tree, and the wild (Romans xi). ..."