0 present participle of encapsulate
1 to express or show the most important facts about something:
It was very difficult to encapsulate the story of the revolution in a single one-hour documentary.
She encapsulates the stereotyped image that the British have of Americans.
Finally, encapsulating a whole transitive relationship in a single manual action is not the same thing as exhibiting genuine language syntax.
This distribution supports a gradual notion of the consistency of a given assignment, encapsulating preferences among the set of assignments.
A following chapter on musical environments becomes more practically orientated with some useful information, well-structured lists and tables encapsulating well-considered information.
We will also convey a first intuition of the basic concepts of hierarchical graphs, namely the ideas of grouping and encapsulating graph elements.
The author proposes a layered architecture of structures, each encapsulating the lexical information at a concrete level of abstraction.
This process of extracting useful building blocks and encapsulating them as evolved genes safeguards the knowledge represented by the schema from future disruption.
But if a clearer, more honest, contract could be salvaged, encapsulating the life cycle principle might be a point in favour of the system.
Thus, biological analogies for encapsulating or enclosing are sought.