0 to secretly become part of a group in order to get information or to influence the way that group thinks or behaves:
A journalist managed to infiltrate the powerful drug cartel.
At about this time the new ideas about "corporate management" had begun to infiltrate (into) local government.
1 to become a member of a group or organization to secretly gather information about its activities
2 (of water) to flow slowly down into the earth from the earth's surface, for example, through cracks in rocks
The castle is infiltrated by foreigners from distant lands.
The image shows moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma, as well as pools of acellular mucin, infiltrating muscularis propria.
In fact this text comes close to suggesting that the world of consultants and development experts has been infiltrated by evil-doers.
Freeze-substitution followed by an aqueous wash and subsequent dehydration produced blocks that were easily infiltrated and sectioned.
Fish were postfixed in 2% osmium tetroxide, dehydrated in an ethanol series, and infiltrated with araldite resin.
The patient was a 76-year-old woman with two foci of infiltrating lobular carcinoma (0.5 and 0.8 cm) in the same quadrant.
Ultrasound can estimate the pathologic size of infiltrating ductal carcinoma.
In this way, the driving field infiltrates into the current sheet owing to particle kinetic effects, and triggers magnetic reconnection when it reaches the center.
中文繁体
(使)潛入, (使)滲透, 滲透(進入某物質、地方、系統或機構)…
More中文简体
(使)潜入, (使)渗透, 渗透(入某物质、地方、系统或机构)…
MoreEspañol
infiltrarse (en), infiltrar(se)…
MorePortuguês
infiltrar, infiltrar-se (em)…
MoreTürk dili
sızmak, gizlice katılmak, aralarına sızmak…
MoreFrançais
(s’)infiltrer (dans)…
MoreČeština
proniknout, infiltrovat…
MoreDansk
infiltrere…
More