Assimilable
capable of being .
Historical Examples
Though the Negro is not assimilable, he is here to stay; he should therefore be helped to develop along his own lines.
Applied Eugenics Paul Popenoe and Roswell Hill Johnson
Food and drink are only carriers of bits of assimilable sunshine.
Etidorhpa or the End of Earth. John Uri Lloyd
Strictly speaking, every poison consisting of assimilable elements may be considered as unwholesome food.
Medical Essays Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
Without this it is wholly absurd to say either that they are or are not assimilable.
Japan and the California Problem Toyokichi Iyenaga
The red man was owner of the land—the yellow man highly civilized and assimilable—but they hindered both sections, and are gone!
Modern Eloquence: Vol II, After-Dinner Speeches E-O Various
The nitrogen of the testa, or covering of the seeds, will hardly be so assimilable as that which exists in their cotyledons.
The Stock-Feeder’s Manual Charles Alexander Cameron
It is absolutely digestible and assimilable, and is triturated with the finest milk sugar.
Valere Aude Louis Dechmann
But truth in the doctrinal form is not natural, proper, assimilable food for the soul of man.
Natural Law in the Spiritual World Henry Drummond
Denial of the right of naturalization to Jews on the ground that they are not assimilable.
The Jew and American Ideals John Spargo
All minerals contained therein are organized and in a perfectly digestible and assimilable form.
Valere Aude Louis Dechmann
Read Also:
- Assimilate
to take in and incorporate as one’s own; absorb: He assimilated many new experiences on his European trip. to bring into conformity with the customs, attitudes, etc., of a group, nation, or the like; adapt or adjust: to assimilate the new immigrants. Physiology. to convert (food) to substances suitable for incorporation into the body and […]
- Assimilate with
to take in and incorporate as one’s own; absorb: He assimilated many new experiences on his European trip. to bring into conformity with the customs, attitudes, etc., of a group, nation, or the like; adapt or adjust: to assimilate the new immigrants. Physiology. to convert (food) to substances suitable for incorporation into the body and […]
- Assimilating
to take in and incorporate as one’s own; absorb: He assimilated many new experiences on his European trip. to bring into conformity with the customs, attitudes, etc., of a group, nation, or the like; adapt or adjust: to assimilate the new immigrants. Physiology. to convert (food) to substances suitable for incorporation into the body and […]
- Assimilation pelvis
assimilation pelvis assimilation pelvis n. A deformity of the pelvis in which the transverse processes of the last lumbar vertebra are fused with the sacrum or in which the last sacral vertebra is fused with the first coccygeal body.
- Assimilationism
the practice or policy of assimilating or encouraging the of people from all ethnic groups and cultures of origin: In the 1900s, some immigrants at first resisted the assimilationism of the New World.