"Supplanted" means to replace or take the place of someone or something, often by force or through cunning tactics. It typically suggests that the replacement is seen as superior or more deserving of the position or role.
The word supplant means replace. Here is a sentence with the word supplant:In most offices, the type writer has now been supplanted by the computer.
Some words that contain the root word "onym" are synonym (meaning a word with a similar meaning), antonym (meaning a word with the opposite meaning), and homonym (meaning a word that sounds the same but has a different meaning).
The homophone for select meaning "to choose" is "selekt."
The Telugu meaning of relation is సంబంధం (sambandham).
An expression of a meaning that contradicts the literal meaning is called an idiom. Idioms are phrases that have a figurative rather than literal meaning, often making them difficult to understand when translated directly.
An appropriate synonym for "supplanted" would be "substitute".
The Abbasids were an Arab dynasty descended from Abbas, uncle of Muhammad, who supplanted the Umayyads in ad 750.
Jaymie is a variant of James which like Jacob means "he who supplants" in Hebrew. (Jacob supplanted his elder brother Esau .)
replaced.
In current use, the benzodiazepines, the best known class of anxiolytics, have been largely supplanted by selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).
The past tense of the word supplant is supplanted, (to have taken the position or the place [of]):'He supplanted Jones as team captain.''The pocket calculator supplanted the slide rule, which succeeded the abacus: each portable calculating machine was, in its turn, capable of increasingly sophisticated mathematical work.'
Havok
He would have supplanted Jesus the Nazorean.
later Greek astronomers
apathy
Penis
Later polish astronomers