Adoption in a sentence as a noun

I expect in any large scale adoption of mechanical turk, this issue will jump to the forefront.

Note that they do not contradict bitcoin, except perhaps in the haphazard and sometimes too fast adoption.

The best we can hope for is that high consumer adoption rates will force many more sites to drop IE6 support which might spur companies to finally test and upgrade.

We want prices at a point where they're low, consumer friendly, and encourage wide adoption while making sure that 5 years from now, we're benefitting from similar low, consumer friendly prices.

Ebooks are more profitable, but it's a more difficult market to control, so publishers are fighting Amazon and doing what they can to slow ebook adoption as much as possible.

The author's complains are a sober reminder that society is not yet ready, and has not yet evolved all the infrastructure it will need to cope with rising global Bitcoin adoption.

At the risk of being too cynical, I suspect that they're open sourcing it because their analytics indicated an adoption rate that wouldn't justify active development.

This delayed G+'s adoption enough that Facebook in particular was able to react, improving both its then-primary web UI, make some privacy improvements, and significantly shore up its public perception.

By then the speculators will have been burned so badly that they'll stay far away, so it'll quietly gain adoption in the background, and then eventually become the new currency of choice when inflation starts to make it's way through current fiat currencies.

Adoption definitions

noun

the act of accepting with approval; favorable reception; "its adoption by society"; "the proposal found wide acceptance"

See also: acceptance acceptation espousal

noun

a legal proceeding that creates a parent-child relation between persons not related by blood; the adopted child is entitled to all privileges belonging to a natural child of the adoptive parents (including the right to inherit)

noun

the appropriation (of ideas or words etc) from another source; "the borrowing of ancient motifs was very apparent"

See also: borrowing