[
UK
/nˌætʃəɹəlaɪzˈeɪʃən/
]
NOUN
- the quality of being brought into conformity with nature
-
changing the pronunciation of a borrowed word to agree with the borrowers' phonology
the naturalization in English of many Italian words - the proceeding whereby a foreigner is granted citizenship
- the introduction of animals or plants to places where they flourish but are not indigenous
How To Use naturalisation In A Sentence
- Sabra, A. I. "The Appropriation and Subsequent Naturalization of Greek Science in Medieval Islam: A Preliminary Statement. " History of Science 25 (1987): 223-43.
- Whether in ancient Greece or in contemporary society, myths are intrinsic to the process of naturalization and normalization.
- An application was made to the Home Secretary who could grant naturalisation.
- This is true of all who refuse to allow Judaism to provincialize itself by applying for naturalization papers wherever it finds a habitat. The Menorah Journal, Volume 1, 1915
- As early as 1790, Americans began to restrict the naturalization of immigrants.
- Even when caught by the coastguard or the Immigration and Naturalisation Service they seldom get sent back.
- The long-term aim of the naturalisation of economic relations was still central to Bukharin's view of socialism.
- Individuals could also be naturalised as subjects, but naturalisation held only in the place where it had been granted, and had no validity elsewhere in the Empire.
- Along with its naturalization of fraternity as an ideal, the battlefield constitutes a special set of ethical protocols that makes it legal for honourable citizens to kill each other in the service of higher collective values.
- How can critical commentary 'mediate the radicalism' without itself performing a pernicious form of naturalisation in making it more accessible?