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单词 individuate
释义

Definition of individuate in English:

individuate

verb ɪndɪˈvɪdʒʊeɪtˌɪndəˈvɪdʒuˌeɪt
[with object]
  • Distinguish from others of the same kind; single out.

    it is easy to individuate and enumerate the significant elements
    Example sentencesExamples
    • What we have seen in the rite of seeing off is a procedure of individuating the deceased through drawing boundaries.
    • The ‘rags to riches’ mythology of the American Dream individuates poverty and wealth.
    • The test was designed to individuate allele I within the Hordeum spontaneum accessions.
    • Rather, we lack clear criteria for individuating beliefs - that is, saying when beliefs are the same and different - without which there is no possibility of counting.
    • Although every baboon is a distinct, highly individuated self, each seems to exist simultaneously as self-in-community or even as self-in-communion.
    • In addition, some pairs of identical twins individuate themselves in early childhood.
    • In addition the superimposition of political and personal texts demonstrates how affect is both individuated and socialised, often simultaneously.
    • Identity is now a much more individuated business, which means that people have to construct it for themselves and tailor it after their own fashion.
    • God is not individuated by his true description, since it is impossible to conceive of any other entity from which he could be distinguished.
    • Solving it would require finding a suitable way to individuate cognitive processes and specifying the precise role of back-up processes.
    • A mass of matter is individuated by the particles that compose it, however organized.
    • They are working toward individuating themselves from their family of origin and trying to be as different from their parents as they can.
    • The cloned child would have her uniquely individuating consciousness that would be constitutive of her personal identity.
    • The actual future turned out to be one of material, individuating plenitude and not at all of minimalist class conformity.
    • The binomial designates a duel made up of two individuated forces which intersect.
    • For Nietzsche, Dionysos symbolized the universal, Apollo symbolized individuated art.
    • To name or individuate the deceased would reduce the national ghost to an ordinary self.
    • Hence, if concepts are constituents of the content then individuating these concepts will require identifying some object, property or natural kind.
    • It helps individuate us, because we establish our own voices by being involved early on in the writing process.
    Synonyms
    present, describe, set out, set forth, draw up, delineate, frame

Derivatives

  • individuation

  • noun ɪndɪvɪdʒʊˈeɪʃ(ə)nˌɪndəˌvɪdʒəˈweɪʃ(ə)n
    • Jung defines individuation as the lifelong process towards ‘the integration of the self’.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Increased behavioral autonomy facilitates secondary processes such as role exploration, identity formation, and individuation.
      • The condition is also called the beginning individuation, a process of self-actualization that continues on to death.
      • The hypotheses proposed were derived from a combination of literature on parenting, identity formation, and individuation in the family context.
      • We end up where we are today: pluralism without purpose, individuation but no community.

Origin

Early 17th century: from medieval Latin individuat- 'singled out', from the verb individuare, from Latin individuus, from in- 'into' + dividuus 'divisible' (from dividere 'to divide').

 
 

Definition of individuate in US English:

individuate

verbˌindəˈvijo͞oˌātˌɪndəˈvɪdʒuˌeɪt
[with object]
  • Distinguish from others of the same kind; single out.

    it is easy to individuate and enumerate the significant elements
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It helps individuate us, because we establish our own voices by being involved early on in the writing process.
    • Although every baboon is a distinct, highly individuated self, each seems to exist simultaneously as self-in-community or even as self-in-communion.
    • God is not individuated by his true description, since it is impossible to conceive of any other entity from which he could be distinguished.
    • For Nietzsche, Dionysos symbolized the universal, Apollo symbolized individuated art.
    • Solving it would require finding a suitable way to individuate cognitive processes and specifying the precise role of back-up processes.
    • What we have seen in the rite of seeing off is a procedure of individuating the deceased through drawing boundaries.
    • In addition, some pairs of identical twins individuate themselves in early childhood.
    • Identity is now a much more individuated business, which means that people have to construct it for themselves and tailor it after their own fashion.
    • Hence, if concepts are constituents of the content then individuating these concepts will require identifying some object, property or natural kind.
    • The binomial designates a duel made up of two individuated forces which intersect.
    • In addition the superimposition of political and personal texts demonstrates how affect is both individuated and socialised, often simultaneously.
    • Rather, we lack clear criteria for individuating beliefs - that is, saying when beliefs are the same and different - without which there is no possibility of counting.
    • The test was designed to individuate allele I within the Hordeum spontaneum accessions.
    • The cloned child would have her uniquely individuating consciousness that would be constitutive of her personal identity.
    • They are working toward individuating themselves from their family of origin and trying to be as different from their parents as they can.
    • A mass of matter is individuated by the particles that compose it, however organized.
    • The actual future turned out to be one of material, individuating plenitude and not at all of minimalist class conformity.
    • To name or individuate the deceased would reduce the national ghost to an ordinary self.
    • The ‘rags to riches’ mythology of the American Dream individuates poverty and wealth.
    Synonyms
    present, describe, set out, set forth, draw up, delineate, frame

Origin

Early 17th century: from medieval Latin individuat- ‘singled out’, from the verb individuare, from Latin individuus, from in- ‘into’ + dividuus ‘divisible’ (from dividere ‘to divide’).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/20 19:28:54