0 to bring animals or plants under human control in order to provide food, power, or company:
1 to bring animals or plants under human control so that humans may use them as food, for power, or as friends
In the poems from this third group, feminine historical memory domesticates the inevitable disruptive effects of time, violence, and death.
It is argued that domesticated pragmatism, with its emphasis on local rather than global perspective, has led to trivialization and degeneration of self-reflective critique.
Instead of secluding, domesticating, or devaluing, privacy guards women's place and participation in public.
Rather, perennial grain breeders are pursuing two parallel strategies: domesticating promising wild perennials and hybridizing annual crops with perennial relatives.
The corporate scientists in the films wish to domesticate it, to control and funnel its powers, to enslave it.
A synanthropic cycle is maintained when domesticated reindeer are herded with dogs.
We believe that it is insufficient to understand mobile phones simply as devices that are ' domesticated' in order to serve specific local requirements.
The communal space was domesticated, then, and the direction of the prisoners' activity within that space strongly referenced the bourgeois domestic scene.
中文繁体
馴化,馴養, 人工培植…
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驯化,驯养, 人工培植…
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domesticar, Domesticar, Cultivar…
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domesticar…
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domestiquer…
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ochočit, domestikovat, zaučit v domácích pracích…
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tæmme, kultivere, oplære til husførelse…
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melatih (hewan), menjinakkan, bercocok-tanam…
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