Absorbed in a sentence as an adjective

And it's absorbed by water -- so trees are a big problem.

The cylinder gets hot, emits x-rays, which are absorbed by the capsule.

I have absorbed everything this guy has ever said or done[2].

A man with with excess money is absorbed in concerns of what to do with it and is hardly free.

One would assume that in time English would be absorbed into other departments that applied it.

They have a code of morality, knowingly chosen or absorbed by default, and they try to be good, most of the time.

Tech types are getting a little arrogant, out of touch, self-absorbed and judgmental these days too.

What I found was quite the opposite, there's a lot more nuance in that book than would really be absorbed by high school students being forced to read it.

But mostly he seems absorbed by his interior life....The idea that Matthew won’t recover no longer pains Jackie.

As it is ported from one time or place to another, it can continue vibrant in its home tongue or it can die and be absorbed by another tongue.

If a scoffing, smarmy, self-absorbed know it all can't openly entertain an opinion that isn't theirs, isn't really as open of a mind as advertised.

And I'm not even sure what of seawater would be absorbed on an empty stomach...it's possible more salt than water would be absorbed, leading to diarrhea as water is left unabsorbed in the intestine, leading to dehydration from poor water absorption and poor salt excretion.

They are supposed to take things that would otherwise remain secret and get inventors to disclose this secret know-how so that it can be absorbed into an ever-broadening public pool of knowledge for society's benefit and, as a trade-off, give the inventor a limited monopoly barring all others from using the invention for a limited time even if those others developed it entirely independently of the efforts of the inventor.

Absorbed definitions

adjective

giving or marked by complete attention to; "that engrossed look or rapt delight"; "then wrapped in dreams"; "so intent on this fantastic...narrative that she hardly stirred"- Walter de la Mare; "rapt with wonder"; "wrapped in thought"

See also: captive engrossed enwrapped intent wrapped

adjective

retained without reflection; "the absorbed light intensity"