¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interplanting
1. interplant [v] - See also: interplant
Medical Definition of Interplanting
1. In experimental embryology, the transferring of a primordial cell mass from one embryo to an indifferent environment in another embryo, as in chorioallantoic grafts or intraocular transplants. (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interplanting
Literary usage of Interplanting
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. New Zealand Forestry by David Ernest Hutchins (1919)
"The cost of interplanting (young tree + insertion + after-care) may be averaged
at Id. per tree planted, or 8s. 4d. per 100 trees per acre. ..."
2. The Whole Art of Rubber-growing by William Wicherley (1911)
"On the other hand, many less fortunate men found interplanting too costly and
troublesome to maintain. This was generally the case where the trees, ..."
3. Some Suggestions for Rhode Island Apple Growers by Andrew Edward Stene (1910)
"interplanting AND DISTANCE APART OF TREES. Under the most favorable conditions,
several years must elapse before an orchard of standard trees comes into ..."
4. The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture: A Discussion for the Amateur, and ...by Liberty Hyde Bailey by Liberty Hyde Bailey (1917)
"The interplanting of young walnut groves with lima beans or other hoed vegetable
crops, ... Vegetable crops are preferable to tree crops for interplanting. ..."
5. Rubber by Philip Schidrowitz (1911)
"... one would gather that there is still a considerable difference of opinion as
to whether clean weeding or interplanting, whether protective or productive ..."
6. The American Apple Orchard: A Sketch of the Practice of Apple Growing in by Frank Albert Waugh (1908)
"In case a still heavier interplanting seems desirable, the most practical way
would be to set the permanent trees in squares once more, ..."
7. The Encyclopedia of Practical Horticulture: A Reference System of Commercial by Granville Lowther, William Worthington (1914)
"In Connecticut the peach is more largely used for interplanting than any other
kind of fruit tree. In many respects the peach is well suited to the purpose. ..."