0 past simple and past participle of embody
The precursor to having one's integrity protected (embodied by the requirement of one's consent) is the capacity to exercise will, make choices, and communicate desires.
The walls of a capital embodied a correspondence with the natural universe, thereby reinforcing the 'heavenly mandate' of the ruler.
The embodied and ideologically embedded nature of cultural capital means that it cannot be transferred rapidly.
Thirdly, we show that an embodied simulator can faithfully reproduce these real robots experiments.
Normative statements of the type embodied in at least the first two principles may not, therefore, travel very well.
When institutional rules are drawn upon with sufficient regularity, they can become embodied via a process of habituation resulting in the adoption of a habit.
The former was embodied in the sovereign whose privilege it was to decide on the existence of human life.
This embodied subtext is in turn read by the audience, based on its members' life experiences and familiarity with theatre and/or filmed drama.