assimilated (verb)

  • 121Mozarabic Rite — • The name Mozarabic Rite is given to the rite used generally in Spain and in what afterwards became Portugal from the earliest times of which we have any information down to the latter part of the eleventh century, and still surviving in the… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 122Language of mathematics — The language of mathematics is the system used by mathematicians to communicate mathematical ideas among themselves. This language consists of a substrate of some natural language (for example English) using technical terms and grammatical… …

    Wikipedia

  • 123Ordos dialect — Not to be confused with Urdu language. The Ordos (also Urdus (in southern dialects); Mongolian ᠣᠷᠳᠣᠰ; Chinese 鄂尔多斯 È ěrduōsī) dialect of Mongolian is spoken in the Ordos City region in Inner Mongolia. It is also sometimes classified as a language …

    Wikipedia

  • 124porropsia —    The term porropsia comes from the Latin verb portare (to carry, to transport, to take away) and the Greek verb opsis (seeing). It translates loosely as seeing things being carried away and is used to denote a visual distortion in which… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 125immigrant — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ illegal ▪ undocumented (esp. AmE) ▪ the 11 million undocumented immigrants living in California ▪ legal ▪ the number of legal immigrants to the US …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 126asparagus — [15] Asparagus comes ultimately from Greek aspáragos (a word related to the Greek verb spargan ‘swell’, to the Latin verb spargere ‘scatter’ – ultimate source of English sparse, disperse, and aspersions – and also to English spark), and has over… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 127Burmese (Myanmar) Language —    Used by the ethnic majority Burmans (Bamars) and members of other ethnic groups who have been assimilated into the mainstream culture and society, Burmese (Myanmar) is Burma s official language. About 40 million people speak it, 30 million… …

    Historical Dictionary of Burma (Myanmar)

  • 128asparagus — [15] Asparagus comes ultimately from Greek aspáragos (a word related to the Greek verb spargan ‘swell’, to the Latin verb spargere ‘scatter’ – ultimate source of English sparse, disperse, and aspersions – and also to English spark), and has over… …

    Word origins