embedded

[ UK /ɛmbˈɛdɪd/ ]
[ US /ɛmˈbɛdɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. enclosed firmly in a surrounding mass
    stone containing many embedded fossils
    peach and plum seeds embedded in a sweet edible pulp
    found pebbles embedded in the silt
  2. inserted as an integral part of a surrounding whole
    an embedded subordinate clause
    confused by the embedded Latin quotations
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use embedded In A Sentence

  • If you defocus from the embedded Zoho Writer you pretty much kill it. The problem with mash-ups « Squash
  • So, the system of existential graphs actually requires three dimensions for its representations, although the third dimension in which the torus is embedded can usually be represented in two dimensions by the use of pictorial devices that Peirce called “fornices” or “tunnel-bridges” and by the use of identificational devices that Peirce called Nobody Knows Nothing
  • His work underscores the aeriality embedded in the rational geometric order of the region’s settlement.
  • ‘If lying is wrong, then he will lie,’ has an antecedent whose embedded content is the same as a statement predicating the property on which the speakers moral disapproval supervenes.
  • The Deity has emeralds embedded in its eyes and diamonds on its forehead and navel.
  • Although the softest condition is obtained when the large globules of cementite are embedded in the ferrite, a smooth machined surface is difficult to obtain due to tearing.
  • Millions of consumer electronics devices - mobile phones, PDAs, PVRs, and DVD platers - are already running on stripped-down embedded versions of Linux.
  • The scene was embedded in his memory.
  • This idea is strongly embedded in the Constitution.
  • Settlers of every nation are embedded in the STZs subterrestrial zones. Deeper
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy