Assimilation

Acceptable For Game Play - US & UK word lists

This word is acceptable for play in the US & UK dictionaries that are being used in the following games:

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
  • n. The act or process of assimilating.
  • n. The state of being assimilated.
  • n. Physiology The conversion of nutriments into living tissue; constructive metabolism.
  • n. Linguistics The process by which a sound is modified so that it becomes similar or identical to an adjacent or nearby sound. For example, the prefix in- becomes im- in impossible by assimilation to the labial p of possible.
  • n. The process whereby a minority group gradually adopts the customs and attitudes of the prevailing culture.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • n. The act of assimilating or the state of being assimilated.
  • n. The metabolic conversion of nutrients into tissue.
  • n. The absorption of new ideas into an existing cognitive structure.
  • n. A sound change process by which the phonetics of a speech segment becomes more like that of another segment in a word (or at a word boundary), so that a change of phoneme occurs.
  • n. (cultural studies) The adoption, by a minority group, of the customs and attitudes of the dominant culture.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • n. The act or process of assimilating or bringing to a resemblance, likeness, or identity; also, the state of being so assimilated.
  • n. The conversion of nutriment into the fluid or solid substance of the body, by the processes of digestion and absorption, whether in plants or animals.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • n. The act or process of assimilating or of being assimilated.
  • n. In physiology, the act or process by which organisms convert and absorb nutriment, so that it becomes part of the fluid or solid substances composing them.
  • n. In pathology, the supposed conversion, according to an obsolete theory, of the fluids of the body to the nature of any morbific matter.
  • n. In philology, the act or process by which one alphabetic sound is rendered like, or less unlike, another neighboring sound; a lightening of the effort of utterance by lessening or removing the discordance of formation between different sounds in a word, or in contiguous words. The kinds and degrees of assimilation are very various, and include a large part of the historical changes in the phonetic form of words. Examples are assimilate from Latin ad-similare, correction from Latin conrectio, impend from L. in-pendere, Latin rectus from reg-tus, Latin rex(reks) from reg-s, English legs (pronounced legz), reaped (pronounced reapt), and so on.
  • n. In physiology, the conversion of chyle into material suitable for appropriation by the tissues.
  • n. In psychology: The process whereby new contents are received into a given consciousness: a general term covering the processes of fusion, association contrast, recognition, etc.
  • n. In Wundt's terminology, a particular form of the simultaneous association of ideas.
  • n. In petrography, a term used to express the theory that molten magmas, when forced upward into the solid rocks, may, through fusion of included fragments or wall rock, absorb or assimilate a certain amount of these foreign materials, thus changing in some degree the chemical composition of the magma as a whole.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • n. the process of assimilating new ideas into an existing cognitive structure
  • n. the state of being assimilated; people of different backgrounds come to see themselves as part of a larger national family
  • n. the process of absorbing nutrients into the body after digestion
  • n. in the theories of Jean Piaget: the application of a general schema to a particular instance
  • n. a linguistic process by which a sound becomes similar to an adjacent sound
  • n. the social process of absorbing one cultural group into harmony with another
  • Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts