grafter
English
editPronunciation
edit- Rhymes: -ɑːftə(ɹ), -æftə(ɹ)
Audio (General Australian): (file)
Etymology 1
editNoun
editgrafter (plural grafters)
- One who inserts scions on other stocks, or propagates fruit by engrafting.
- An instrument by which grafting is facilitated.
- The original tree from which a scion has been taken for grafting upon another tree.
- (slang) Someone who works in market stalls.
- (English slang) a hard worker who puts in long hours
Related terms
editTranslations
editone who inserts scions on other stocks, or propagates fruit by ingrafting
|
an instrument by which grafting is facilitated
|
the original tree from which a scion has been taken for grafting upon another tree
slang: someone who works in market stalls
Etymology 2
editNoun
editgrafter (plural grafters)
- A corrupt person, one who receives graft.
- 1911, The Twentieth Century Magazine, volume 4, page 335:
- If the people are corrupt; if everybody is a grafter, as our pessimistic friends would have us believe, Roosevelt would be unpopular. His popularity is proof that the people, as a whole, are honest.
- 1980, David Mark Chalmers, The Muchrake Years, Krieger Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 152:
- It is rather confused rhetoric to call a grafter a thief. His crime is not that he filches money from the safe but that he betrays a trust.
- 2007, Rebecca Menes, "Limiting the Reach of the Grabbing Hand: Graft and growth in American Cities, 1880 to 1930", in Edward L. Glaeser, Claudia Goldin (eds.), Corruption and Reform: Lessons from America's Economic History, National Bureau of Economic Research Conference Report, The University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 64.
- Rapid city growth rewarded the circumspect grafter with opportunities for what one famous Tammany Hall politician termed “honest graft” […] .