0 present 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: --
Without entering into a description of all the observations made on these mutant enzymes, it suffices to mention that many different cases were encountered.
Moral orientations of justice and care among veterinarians entering veterinary practice.
Upon entering a snail, the parasite migrates to the heart and digestive gland where it transforms into successive stages of sporocysts.
Or we might say that by entering the military service, the private has tacitly or explicitly promised to obey orders from his superiors.
After entering available information, these aspects can be queried for in terms of the most probable combination of the uninstantiated variables.
The air was filtered with active-charcoal before entering the odour source container.
Furthermore, the trend mainly consists of families without immediate ambitions of entering national politics.
Items apparently produced within the village, and entering households following horizontal exchanges, show almost as much variation.