Assimilation in a sentence as a noun

Striving to meet others expectations may be a necessary cost of assimilation, but I am not going to do it.

When I used to read the Jewish papers, all I learned about were pogroms, riots in Palestine, and assimilation in America.

> "If you want to fight militant Islam, the first thing to do is to limit immigration from those countries and spread the immigrants out to force assimilation.

Due to apartheid, assimilation was limited, and the population was drawn from all over India.

It is a great example of one of those seemingly small details that X manages to use as mule to talk about larger issues of identity and assimilation.

So rather than saying "A new selection mechanism for data assimilation based on similar mechanisms that have been proposed in neural processes.

Google has acquired Nest... so now Google has also acquired DropcamNest wasn't an acquihire or an assimilation, but was always stated as a separately operating organization.

And the in-progress human studies show benefits on some dimensions, as would make sense since Americans are lardy-lardballs and all the nutritionist advice in the world has yet to make a dent in our belts.> SMR: The author has no idea what he's talking about when it comes to protein digestion and assimilation.

Assimilation definitions

noun

the state of being assimilated; people of different backgrounds come to see themselves as part of a larger national family

noun

the social process of absorbing one cultural group into harmony with another

See also: absorption

noun

the process of absorbing nutrients into the body after digestion

See also: absorption

noun

a linguistic process by which a sound becomes similar to an adjacent sound

noun

the process of assimilating new ideas into an existing cognitive structure

See also: acculturation

noun

in the theories of Jean Piaget: the application of a general schema to a particular instance