2. Noun. The planting of new plants to replace those that have been harvested ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Replanting
1. replant [v] - See also: replant
Lexicographical Neighbors of Replanting
Literary usage of Replanting
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Annual Report by Ohio State Board of Agriculture (1876)
"replanting. This should be attended to as soon as you are satisfied the plant is
weak or has failed, because you should have as little difference in the ..."
2. American Journal of Dental Science by American Society of Dental Surgeons (1880)
"replanting Teeth.—A correspondent states that in the preparation of the tooth for
... replanting is becoming more and more a favorite method of treating ..."
3. Principles of Plant Culture: An Elementary Treatise Designed Asa Text-book by Emmett Stull Goff (1910)
"Nursery trees that cannot be packed for shipment at the proper time, are often
lifted and heeled in, to retard the starting of the buds. C— replanting. 4o9. ..."
4. The Fruit Cultivator's Manual: Containing Ample Directions for the by Thomas Bridgeman (1844)
"Over twenty years' experience in replanting some thousands of hard and soft Maple,
Elm, and others, enables me to speak positively on this precaution. ..."
5. The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture: A Discussion for the Amateur, and by Liberty Hyde Bailey (1917)
"Planting is undertaken at any time of the year. replanting is made at once.
Again, water is sometimes withheld for two to four weeks after planting, ..."
6. A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital by John Beauchamp Jones (1866)
"I am replanting corn, lima beans, etc. The other vegetables are growing well.
One of my fig-bushes was killed—that is, nearly all the branches. ..."
7. A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital by John Beauchamp Jones (1866)
"I am replanting corn, lima beans, etc. The other vegetables are growing well.
One of my fig-bushes was killed—that is, nearly all the branches. ..."