supplant (v.)
c. 1300, supplaunten, "dispossess, acquire (a position from someone) by strategy or scheming" (implied in agent noun supplanter), from Old French suplanter, sosplanter "to trip up, overthrow, drive out, usurp," or directly from Latin supplantare "trip up, overthrow," from assimilated form of sub "under" (see sub-) + planta "sole of the foot" (see plant (n.)). There is a sense-evolution parallel in Hebrew akabh "he beguiled," from akebh "heel" (compare the biblical story of Jacob).
The English word is attested mid-14c. in a literal sense of "trip up, cause to stumble," but it did not last. In reference to things or ideas, "take the place of another, replace one with another," by 1670s. Related: Supplanted; supplanting; supplantation.
Trends of supplant
updated on October 19, 2023
Dictionary entries near supplant
supination
supine
supper
supperless
suppertime
supplant
supple
supplement
supplemental
supplementary
suppleness