Similar words: room, roof, boot, moot, tooth, foot, troop, droop. Meaning: ['ruːtɪd] adj. 1. absolutely still 2. having roots of a specified sort.
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91. Seismologists said the quake appeared to have been rooted about 30 miles underground, deep enough to prevent catastrophic destruction.
92. What needs to be stressed at this point is that this evolution is rooted in a very specific historical moment of production.
93. Much of the problem of the underclass, we continue to believe, arises from perverse incentives rooted in misguided paternalism.
94. A second explanation is that antibiotic production is rooted in the plant material that is the food source.
95. Narendra was some kind of new thing, a maverick, rooted in the traditional but open to new ways of being.
96. Deeply rooted in peasant culture was the belief that the land should belong to whoever worked it with his own hands.
97. The traditional liberal interpretation is rooted in an approach to history fundamentally at odds with that of Soviet historiography.
98. This is the optimism upon which all golf is rooted.
99. Historically,(sentencedict.com) they are rooted in the values of Western civilization.
100. The idea of centre is deeply rooted in the human mind.
101. And rooted in history ... the ancient art of coppicing.
102. This purpose, for the theist, is real and rooted in an objective cosmic mind.
103. The Civil and Political Rights Covenant is rooted in western legal and ethical values.
104. It is rooted in history, embedded in bureaucratic culture, and encouraged by outside groups.
105. Young Bruce My background couldn't really have been more deeply rooted in the whims and cultures of tight-knit Devon and Cornwall.
106. While engineering curricula included science and mathematics, they were still rooted in the shop floor.
107. If it is rooted in a view of man interacting with his environment, what is the character of those interactions?
108. Our instinctive reactions seem to be rooted in the past and they are not always appropriate to twentieth-century living.
109. Some are rooted in simple, everyday stress, others in anxiety, and some others in the more serious anxiety disorders.
110. All were rooted in the nineteenth-century stance of the artist as critical outsider,[www.Sentencedict.com] disdainful of the niceties of the bourgeoisie.
111. This is based on enumerative classification, which is deeply rooted in the traditions of epidemiology and vital statistics.
112. In lakes the rooted forms may appear at a depth of 2 to 3 meters.
113. For a man so rooted in his domesticity the nomadic life of the Official War Artist was a gamble.
114. Had some deeply rooted shame kept her from telling me what was really going on?
115. Tonight, she brings her deeply rooted Southwestern style to Tucson.
116. Consequently, while corporate structures have developed apace since reorganization, it is questionable whether the corporate ethos has become deeply rooted.
117. Its vigour and vitality attest to a popular piety deeply rooted in the everyday life of the local community.
118. Will my cover-drive still leave the off-side fielders rooted helplessly to the ground as the ball speeds to the boundary?
119. Any struggle rooted in politicized and grass-roots mobilization is bound to overshadow even the most earnest efforts of politically inhibited endeavors.
120. Some things are more genuine than others, or rather more firmly rooted in evidence.