0 present participle of assimilate --
1 to become part of a group, country, society, etc., or to make someone or something become part of a group, country, society, etc.: --
2 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.
3 to absorb food or a substance into the tissue of a living organism: --
The leaders of evidence were lawyers, and were extremely important in directing questioning and analysing and assimilating information. 17.
It is here that psychoanalysis begins to accommodate older age rather than simply assimilating it into an existing schema.
The second is an evaluation of the prospects of assimilating political obligation to the general principle.
Retraction is a strategy for assimilating borrowings (36a) and for achieving the agreement in backness in sentence phonology (36b).
The linear-segmental scenario in which an assimilating position clones melody from some other source can only be understood as fortition.
In doing this, aspects of the collected data were emphasized, minimized, or set aside for the purposes of categorizing and assimilating relevant information.
However, elsewhere they mention "the weak representations characteristic of implicit cognition," thus assimilating weak conscious representations with unconscious representations.
Even so, she was faced with assimilating a formidable body of material and collection of examples.