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词汇 assimilated
释义 assimilated
past simple and past participle ofassimilate
assimilate
verb[ I or T ]
uk /əˈsɪm.ɪ.leɪt/ us /əˈsɪm.ə.leɪt/

assimilateverb[I or T] (JOIN)


to become part of a group, country, society, etc., or to make someone or something become part of a group, country, society, etc.: 加入;融入;(使)同化
The European Union should remain flexible enough to assimilate more countries quickly.欧盟应该保持足够的灵活性,以加快步伐吸收更多的国家为其成员。
You shouldn't expect immigrants to assimilate into an alien culture immediately.你不应该指望移民能够马上融入一种外国文化中。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Including and containing
absorptive capacity
accessibly
all in
assimilable
assimilate
carry
cast
draw
EDI
EDIB
embody
embracingly
encompass
factor
number someone/something among someone/something
O, o
pack something in
pepper
pepper something with something
seat

assimilateverb[I or T] (LEARN)


to understand and remember new information and make it part of your basic knowledge so that you can use it as your own: 吸收(信息等);学习(知识等)
It's hard to assimilate so much information.很难吸收这么多的信息。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Learning & knowing
absorptive capacity
achievement gap
acquirable
acquire
acquisition
audit
bone
know better (than someone)idiom
know better (than to do something)idiom
know something from something
know something like the back of your handidiom
know your way around somethingidiom
orientation
recognition
recognize
study holiday
study under someone
subskill
subspeciality
subspecialize

assimilateverb[I or T] (ABSORB)


to absorb food or a substance into the tissue of a living organism: 吸收(营养等)
In this form vitamins can be easily assimilated by the body.在这种形态下,维生素非常易于身体吸收。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Animal & plant biology - general words
abiotic
anatomic
anatomical
anatomically correct
anti-Darwinian
biophysics
Darwinist
entomological
entomologist
entomology
eukaryote
experiment station
fission
naturalist
organically
overstimulate
overstimulated
overstimulation
photosynthetically
survival of the fittest

assimilateverb[I or T] (OF SOUNDS)


[ I or T ] phonetics specialized
(of a speech sound) to be influenced by the sound that comes before or after it; (of a speaker) to pronounce a speech sound in a way that is influenced by the sound that comes before or after it:
Here, in the sound [tʃ], the initial dental sound [t] is lost and assimilated to [ʃ].
They found that velar and labial consonants sometimes assimilate in English.
In their analysis, they find that speakers prefer not to assimilate sibilants or labials.
The /v/ in "fivepence" will be devoiced (because of the following /p/) and may even be assimilated to a voiceless /f/: /faifpens/.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Linguistics: phonology & phonetics
accommodation
alliterative
alveolar
apheresis
aphesis
assonance
diphthong
intrusive
labial
labialize
labiodental
mispronounce
postalveolar
postconsonantal
retroflex
retroflexion
rhotic
the International Phonetic Alphabet
unpronounceable
unrepeatable

Related words


assimilable
assimilation
assimilative

Examples of assimilated


assimilated

In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives. Some of these examples may show the adjective use.


This structure then accommodates, adaptively, in turn allowing a broader range of environmental inputs to be assimilated.
Like partly assimilated loans, they, too, may be exempt from some of the constraints that govern the core vocabulary of the language.
But, as such, most of the critical instances can be assimilated only by something close to a legal fiction.
Words with too weak a weight in domains (weight < 0.1) are not kept for computing the similarity, as they are assimilated to noise.
For the population at large, moreover, for whom expulsions had become a routine dimension of urban life, evacuation was easily assimilated to deportation.
It had more impact than sophisticated jazz, because more easily assimilated, and was a more widespread outlet for boisterous youth with its defiance of conventions.
Originally, the technocratic use of incentives was criticized as manipulative and anti-democratic; today incentives are assimilated to market mechanisms and favorably compared to state coercion.
All languages have assimilated variant pronunciations deeleebobb/pper.
From the 4th to 9th centuries the region underwent profound changes as one group displaced, assimilated, or mixed with others to produce new ethnicities.
What are the misrecognitions that haunt a project where ancient music and its study are assimilated to 'world music'?
Spontaneous self-expression is deferred in favour of successfully assuming the assimilated role - what actors refer to as 'inhabiting the mask'.
Here it is greatly expanded and is assimilated into a principal component of the structure.
Today all their descendants are either completely or partly assimilated.
Should offense thus be assimilated generally to harm?
They have assimilated, in part or in full, many aspects of western culture.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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