incorporate
verb OPAL W
/ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪt/
/ɪnˈkɔːrpəreɪt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they incorporate | /ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪt/ /ɪnˈkɔːrpəreɪt/ |
he / she / it incorporates | /ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪts/ /ɪnˈkɔːrpəreɪts/ |
past simple incorporated | /ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪtɪd/ /ɪnˈkɔːrpəreɪtɪd/ |
past participle incorporated | /ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪtɪd/ /ɪnˈkɔːrpəreɪtɪd/ |
-ing form incorporating | /ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪtɪŋ/ /ɪnˈkɔːrpəreɪtɪŋ/ |
- incorporate something The new car design incorporates all the latest safety features.
- incorporate something in/into/within something We have incorporated all the latest safety features into the design.
- Many of your suggestions have been incorporated in the plan.
Extra Examples- Results are incorporated within personalized medical records.
- The computer components are incorporated seamlessly.
- The data is now incorporated in the total figures.
- The territory was formally incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1876.
- These conditions must be expressly incorporated into the contract of employment.
- These new features can easily be incorporated.
- We can incorporate this information into our report.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- fully
- explicitly
- expressly
- …
- as
- in
- into
- …
- [often passive] (business) to create a legally recognized company
- be incorporated The company was incorporated in 2008.
Word Originlate Middle English: from late Latin incorporat- ‘embodied’, from the verb incorporare, from in- ‘into’ + Latin corporare ‘form into a body’ (from corpus, corpor- ‘body’).