0 past simple and past participle of condition
1 to train or influence a person or animal mentally so that they do or expect a particular thing without thinking about it:
2 to try to improve the quality or appearance of your hair, skin, etc. by putting a conditioner on it
Such modalities of access and exclusion are conditioned by linguistic diversity, which establishes communicative boundaries.
Because these effects may be conditioned by the electoral system, a comparative approach across different electoral systems is useful.
However, it is important to note that decisions regarding land expansion are conditioned by access to complementary inputs.
Consequently, what we know is conditioned both by past events and by where we stand at any moment with respect to those events.
We collected conditioned media from these hepatocytes at 48 hour intervals.
Cue-specific conditioned stimuli are transmitted to the thalamus by external and visceral pathways.
Moreover, ideological thinking conditioned voters' reliance on character assessment much more strongly when motivation (qua campaign concern) was high than when it was low.
Deletion of reduced vowels may also be conditioned by word frequency.