understand:[~+object]He tried to assimilate new ideas. Sociology [no object](of a person from a different background) to adjust (oneself) to the dominant cultural group or national culture:The immigrants assimilated rapidly. [~+object (+into+object)]to bring (people from a different backgrou...
understand, absorb, grasp, digest, comprehend, assimilate, get the hang of (informal) She seemed to take in all he said.2. include, contain, comprise, cover, embrace, encompass The country takes in a population of more than 40 million people....
This mass movement of people has led to the on-going extinction of large numbers of the world’s languages as people abandon their home regions and language in order to assimilate into their new homes.Language Shift, Language Maintenance, and Language Death...
The mass riots that rocked French society over the past week put the spotlight on the disaster of liberal mass immigration policies in the European democracies and the total failure by Western societies to assimilate the new arrivals welcomed through years of mass immigration, into the culture, tra...
The more and better information acquired, the easier it will be for the team to assimilate and implement it with clear benefits for the NPD project. Therefore, extant research has led to a deeper understanding of what information is important for exploratory market learning. It has not tackled...
So at the end of 2014 I almost gave up trying to learn, but then I found Jack and his methods. It is amazing how the tips, the steps and my mindset about the process of learning changed. Today I know how to study alone, how to make it interesting, and how to assimilate the langu...
A key challenge here is to assimilate the large-scale data in free-forms, such as reports on incidents and vulnerabilities that are openly available from numerous sources including vulnerability databases and international agencies2. An ad-hoc structuring of information by interlinking reports on ...
At the very least, leaves need to assimilate enough carbon during their life time to payback their own investment in construction15,17,18; and, presumably more than that, payback some proportion of the construction and maintenance costs of stems and roots19. Further profits are required to ...
3. When she notices its attractiveness (rakti), she creates further, as she desires to assimilate this state (Sthitināśakālī). 4. Then she creates doubt—the obstacle in assimilation—which she devours as well (Yamakālī). 5. The part of the state that is the devoured doubt, ...
The question how Definition 2.1 relates to asymptotic flatness as defined through conditions on the metric, either in space–time (4d) or in the initial value problem (3d), is very subtle; smoothness of \(({\tilde{M}},{\tilde{g}})\) implies detailed fall-off (or ‘peeling’) ...