英:['ru:tɪdʒ]
美:['rutɪdʒ]
英:['ru:tɪdʒ]
美:['rutɪdʒ]
root·age
ru tihj
Noun
1. fixedness by or as if by roots;
"strengthened by rootage in the firm soil of faith"
2. a developed system of roots
3. the place where something begins, where it springs into being;
"the Italian beginning of the Renaissance"
"Jupiter was the origin of the radiation"
"Pittsburgh is the source of the Ohio River"
"communism's Russian root"
The first known use of rootage was in 1855
1 Nothing is more astounding, on their own showing, than the ignorance of the Fathers about the nature, the significance, the descent of Gnosticism, and its rootage in the remotest past.
2 Sturdy oaks and mountain pines that had weathered every storm for fifty years, were torn up from their firm rootage.
3 The opposite wall was covered with verdure—hardy trees and shrubs found their rootage in the crevices between the rocks.
4 We shall find our rootage in the soil.
5 You forget the wide rootages of everything when you boost some particular region.
6 The rootage of literature in the spiritual nature and experience of the race is the fundamental fact not only in the history of this rich and splendid art, but in its relation to culture.
7 I believe, for one, that you cannot tear up ancient rootages and safely plant the tree of liberty in soil which is not native to it.
8 Some dwarf firs and low bushes had gained rootage, however, and it was possible for them to huddle there without fear of rolling to the rocks beneath.
9 Its flatiron-shaped pebble-beach jutted out from the lake's west shore and was covered with fine old forest trees garlanded with vines; and from their graveled rootage there gurgled a limpid spring of sweet waters.
10 After such fashion and with thorough rootage in country life must the minister of today turn to spiritual account the wealth-producing methods of farming.
11 From this rootage flows the vitality which imparts immortality to its noblest products, and which supplies an educational element unrivalled in its enriching and enlarging quality.
12 And he has not hesitated to depict its rootage in the flesh; not overlooking its rise in the spirit to noblest heights.
13 When the conditions which produced the popular ballads become clear to the imagination, their depth of rootage, not only in the community life but in the community love, becomes also clear.
14 This morainial deposit which offered rootage for the trees and bushes was but a narrow streak—a sort of an island on the glacier.
15 Springing from the twin rootage of Magna Charta and the Declaration of Independence, his judicial statesmanship finds no parallel in the salient features of its achievement outside our own annals.
16 This was to give the peas deep rootage, which is a point necessary for the quick and stable growth of this vegetable.
2 生根
rhizogenic rooted root-bound take strike plant radicate rhizogenesis radication root seat strike root take root
3 扎根
4 起源
genetic fontal -geny inchoation original growth rise beginning principle birth nurse origin genesis ancestry pedigree authorship provenance derivation rootstock filiation provenience principium headspring spring stem descend germ
5 根源
Germinal fontal base source parent mother bottom spring root seed birth font nerve spawn fountain spore whence rootstock taproot fountainhead radix germ father principle authorship fons et origo center centre origin headspring First Cause
6 固定
inerratic put fast constant fixed stable upset built-in static stationary stated seated settled rooted inflexible immobile immovable staid fixative stabile immotile fixedly lock bond settlement fixture stabilization fixing fixation mortise settling fastness immovability set fix settle anchor tighten moor establish seat bed root stabilize stereotype peg fasten immobilize