0 to become part of a group, country, society, etc., or to make someone or something become part of a group, country, society, etc.:
1 to understand and remember new information and make it part of your basic knowledge so that you can use it as your own:
It's hard to assimilate so much information.
2 to absorb food or a substance into the tissue of a living organism:
3 to take in and make a part of your basic knowledge something learned from others, so that you can use it as your own:
[ T ] We hoped the students would assimilate the information contained in the lecture.
[ T ] Once outsiders, they had now been assimilated into the cultural mainstream.
After assimilating some additional data in the following sections, we shall return to this possibility in 5.
Words with too weak a weight in domains (weight < 0.1) are not kept for computing the similarity, as they are assimilated to noise.
Religious differences are not comic but a source of bloodthirstiness, and religious conversion figures importandy as the exotic female assimilates into western religion.
As already noted, he contended that foreigners would strengthen the national organism by assimilating into it.
All languages have assimilated variant pronunciations deeleebobb/pper.
From the 4th to 9th centuries the region underwent profound changes as one group displaced, assimilated, or mixed with others to produce new ethnicities.
She reasons that cliticisation differs crucially from handshape assimilation, where orientation assimilates as well.
The second process is dominant handshape assimilation, where the clitic retains its movement but assimilates its handshape to that of the host.
中文繁体
加入, 融入, (使)同化…
More中文简体
加入, 融入, (使)同化…
MoreEspañol
asimilar, integrarse…
MorePortuguês
assimilar, integrar-se…
MoreTürk dili
yeni bilgiyi özümlemek, anlamak, benimsemek…
MoreFrançais
assimiler…
MoreČeština
přijímat, strávit…
MoreDansk
optage, assimilere…
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