0 to get on a train: --
1 to cause something to happen, or to be caused by something: --
2 to make something part of a liquid or flow of something and carry it along: --
3 to make something have the same pattern or rhythm as something else: --
Experimental animals deprived of their pineal gland are slower to entrain.
The time-cues are not strong enough to entrain the body clock to a 24-hour period.
Melatonin has both a soporific effect and an ability to entrain the sleep-wake rhythm.
The music is to entrain the heart rate, blood pressure and respiration of the person in order to help calm them.
Millions of tons of this entrained water sinks, circulating back down to the south along the sea bottom.
The formula gives a rough estimate of the amount of water that could have been entrained by this fireball.
The Bolsheviks had entrained their ignoble withdrawal.
She plays a widow who entrains a legal battle when her new neighbour orders her tree to be uprooted.