Subsume in a sentence as a verb

Typeclasses subsume many of the uses of modules, but can be entirely inferred.

The trick of identity politics is to subsume and trivialize real social problems, and it's Thiel who has fallen for it.

>> This is where the author seems confused: if I subsume GPL code into a BSD-licensed project, my project becomes licensed under GPL.

Prolog has a good meta model, but it doesn't seem to subsume other models as cleanly, consistently, or efficiently as Lisp.

Geometric Algebra can subsume complex numbers, quaternions and plane geometry - projections, rotations etc and easily extend them to higher surfaces.

Logically addressed networks are finally starting to break, and that's a good thing, but the catalyst that will move us away from these systems is one that subsumes existing infrastructure while adding new features.

Why does Lisp subsume every programming language ever?I found in this e-zinewhose title I can't repeat without bloating the paragraphs I writethat I didn't really gain anything after reading it all.

Since you have it installed, \ntrykeybase -hkeybase track That seems to subsume web-of-trust"limits on that identification are two-fold... of twitter>...and... of tweeting>"So it is actually the same argument repeated.

It would be extremely silly to argue that one is "really" addiction and other is not, because "addiction" is just an abstract category we created to subsume different instances of similar phenomenology.

As a contractor in Canada, where healthcare costs are not a problem, there is really really no incentive for me to subsume myself to a bureaucracy not to mention that I am too accented and overly pigmented to ever look like the hiring manager's cousin.

But more than that, the '30s were something like the '60s in reverse: just as everyone over 35 discovered individualism and self-actualisation in the '60s, in the 1930s very many people really did feel a surging need to subsume their individuality into a greater collective, marching forward together.

Subsume definitions

verb

contain or include; "This new system subsumes the old one"

verb

consider (an instance of something) as part of a general rule or principle

See also: colligate