partake in

VERB
  1. have, give, or receive a share of
    We shared the cake
  2. be active in
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How To Use partake in In A Sentence

  • One could make the case that just as drugs are addictive, and require the addict to partake in more and more powerful drugs to achieve the same high, even so sexual indulgence is an addiction requiring new highs, with homosexuality, bestiality, pedophilia, etc. merely variants of the ‘drugs’ required to achieved said highs. The Volokh Conspiracy » Justice Kagan I Presume?
  • We do not only meet to share each other's burdens, but also to partake in each other's joys.
  • So I went to a trendy lounge in my neighborhood on Friday night and decided to partake in the Pabst Blue Ribbon revival.
  • According to theodicies that emphasize soul-making and defeasibility, this is not because God is malevolent, but so that we can share with him the knowledge that evil is creation's enemy, and partake in the glory of its defeat. Divine Providence
  • From the mock black and white flashback in which the U. S military discovers the subversive effects of heavy pot use, to an engaging montage that introduces Dale Denton and his liberal opinion but non-liberal use of marijuana, while going about his work as a despised Process Server, Pineapple Express makes an excellent first impression and feels like a rather affinitive take on today's slackers who partake in casual drug use. DVD Times
  • We want to partake in something of beauty, of glory, to take us out and up. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mr. Kudlak, who has lived in Sag Harbor for over a decade, said the bayside allows residents to partake in a number of water activities such as fishing, boating and kayaking. Sag Harbor Favors History Over Luxury
  • When Shilling himself first arrived to partake in West Coast water sports, he bodysurfed naked.
  • I can never get over the shock of seeing Jake actually partake in classroom activities.
  • My companion made no reply; his face ceased to shine, and as he sat whizzing past his dinner, I mentally compared his recent exultation with that of those who in the present day extol much of its spirit, use many of its arguments, and partake in most of its triumphs, in utter ignorance as to whitherwards it is all tending as surely as the Great Western rails run into Paddington. Obiter Dicta
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