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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Replant

Replant \Re*plant"\ (rE-pl?nt"), v. t. To plant again.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
replant

1570s, from re- "back, again" + plant (v.). Related: Replanted; replanting.

Wiktionary
replant

vb. To plant again, especially to plant using different plants, or in a different design.

WordNet
replant

v. plant again or anew; "They replanted the land"; "He replanted the seedlings"

Usage examples of "replant".

Elfhame Outremer, and working with the elves to replant trees and reconsecrate the Grove.

No doubt these causes would tend greatly to the former scarcity of the finer kinds, but all the difficulties, if they can be called such, may be overcome by the very simple process of either putting in cuttings like wallflower slips during summer, or, as soon as the old plants are past their best bloom, dividing and replanting the various parts deeper, whereby all of them, however small, will make good plants the following season.

She was glad Kade had done that much replanting, but it made it difficult for her to remain hidden.

On sunny afternoons Corinna and Rhian worked in the gardens, replanting herbs and flowers where uncaring boots had trampled the young plants.

He was still mildly high from a joint smoked early in the afternoon and so he imagined himself getting in there and untangling and replanting, propagating and creating something of unearthly beauty, a little Garden of Eden.

The Saint Emilion was wholly authentic, although the Bordeaux region and its immediate neighbors had been replanted from gene banks as recently as 2330, when connoisseurs had decided that the native rootstocks had suffered too much deterioration in the tachytelic phase of ecospheric deterioration which had followed the environmental degradations of the Crash.

One day, on returning from a long excursion which the Huberts allowed her to take twice a year, on Pentecost Monday and on Assumption Day, she took home with her a sweetbriar bush, and then amused herself by replanting it in the narrow garden.

That of course includes the maltreated knight Publius Servilius, who I hope by now has replanted his vines and applied as much manure as those delicate plants can tolerate.

The house retains its evil reputation, but the replanted vine is as orderly and well-behaved a vegetable as a nervous person could wish to sit under of a pleasant night, when the katydids grate out their immemorial revelation and the distant whippoorwill signifies his notion of what ought to be done about it.

In the year that had elapsed from the time I replanted the root, the plant had grown into a large bush.

Second, I had to repeat exactly the same dance I had performed when I replanted the root.

The trees from which the fine fruit I have spoken of, came, had been planted and replanted sixteen times, and to this treatment the proprietor of the orchard attributed his-success.

They were called mafun, and they had even appeared on the table at the Citadel, where they were esteemed as a delicacy, although they could not be replanted from the wild into any polder field.

What we need to do is flush the whole system, and replant - but it'd be a lot safer to do that somewhere we could get aired up.

As to the betrayal, does one betray a rose when he replants it, or an ant in an ant farm by killing its queen?