0 past simple and past participle of enter --
1 to come or go into a particular place: --
2 to be included in a competition, race, or exam, or to arrange for someone else to do this: --
Are you going to enter the photography competition?
All three companies have entered the race to develop a new system.
Both men have been entered for/in the 100 metres in Paris next month.
3 to put information into a computer, book, or document: --
4 to become a member of a particular organization, or to start working in a particular type of job: --
The fluid then entered a lower storage tank, from which it was returned to the upper tank by means of a pump.
More specifically, these individuals were in a state other than ' retirement ' when they entered the panel, and are observed to make a transition into retirement.
Her depression resolved after a year, and she was entered into a special school for children with emotional disturbance.
Two dummy variables were entered to indicate in which region the respondents lived, with the south as the reference group.
During the day, some ants regularly walked all over inflorescence at all stages and even entered inside open spathes.
Both species of parasitoid delay larval development until the host has reached full size and has entered the ground to pupate.
My analysis begins with a sketch of how recordings entered local popular life in the early decades of this century.
This imbalance only disappears if a sufficient number of new patients entered the trial.