0 present participle of conform
1 to behave according to the usual standards of behaviour that are expected by a group or society:
At our school, you were required to conform, and there was no place for originality.
Only by conforming "to judicious rules" can women "pass through the change with little or no suffering" (93, 92).
The animals will be rational agents in the sense of conforming to the minimal version of rational choice theory.
The result of such recoarsening is a conforming triangulation that would be obtainable from the original triangulation by a sequence of refinement steps.
In doing so, we were conforming to one of the most fundamental aspects of the western intellectual tradition.
These forms had the advantage of conforming to the neoclassical conditions for constrained consumer maximization.
He can therefore choose to avoid those consequences if he wishes by conforming to the officer's order.
Articles not conforming to these instructions will be returned to the corresponding author for correction, and will delay review and publication.
Politeness is the practice of conforming linguistic action to current social expectations that are bound to speech communities.