Crossword clues for adapt
adapt
- Respond to change
- One way to cope
- Modify for a medium
- Get with the program
- Blend in
- Become used to a new situation
- Become adjusted
- Alter to fit
- Adjust to a new situation
- What labels must do with pop culture
- Rewrite for the screen
- Make usable
- Make needed adjustments
- Make a screenplay out of, maybe
- Learn to adjust
- Get accustomed (to)
- Find one's niche?
- Demonstrate elasticity
- Become acclimatized
- Adjust to one's environment
- Adjust to circumstances
- Adjust to a situation
- What star must do to survive stardom
- What bands must do to survive
- Way to fight extinction
- Turn into a TV show, say
- Turn into a movie, perhaps
- Turn from a book into a movie, say
- Turn a book into a film, say
- To adjust to the industry
- Take from the stage, at times
- Suit to one's needs
- Suit (to)
- Show elasticity
- Roll with life's punches
- Rewrite for another medium
- Rewrite for a movie, say
- Rewrite for a film, say
- Prepare for the stage
- Novelize, e.g
- Not be stuck in one's ways
- Not be a dinosaur
- Modify to new conditions
- Modify to meet new conditions
- Modify to make fit
- Modify accordingly
- Make useful by changes
- Make some concessions
- Make lemonade from lemons, so to speak
- Make into a musical, e.g
- Make into a movie, say
- Make into a film, perhaps
- Make books into movies, say
- Make books into movies, e.g
- Make books into movies
- Make accommodations
- Learn to make do
- Handle change
- Get used to new conditions
- Get used to changes
- Get used to change
- Get to work, in a way
- Fix to fit
- Exhibit flexibility
- Evolve, perhaps
- Do as the Romans do, so to speak
- Convert to a screenplay
- Convert to a musical, say
- Change, evolutionarily
- Change, as a species
- Change to survive
- Change to accommodate change
- Change as needed
- Change as necessary
- Bring to the screen, perhaps
- Bring "Pride and Prejudice" to PBS, say
- Become familiar with new surroundings
- Avoid extinction
- Adjust to the environment
- Adjust to new surroundings
- Adjust (5)WASATAB
- Grow accustomed
- Accommodate
- Go with the flow
- Get used (to)
- Modify to fit
- Make fitting
- Customize to fit
- Fight extinction, maybe
- Change according to circumstances
- Fix to suit
- Change with the times
- Put in a new medium
- Suit to the circumstances
- Establish new habits for
- Change to suit a new purpose
- Learn to cope
- Conform as needed
- Modify to particular conditions
- Rework, as a book into a film
- Show flexibility
- Not stand still
- Trim to fit, perhaps
- Adjust as you must
- Avoid extinction, say
- Get used to it
- Learn to get along
- Novelize, e.g.
- Evolve (per 25-Across)
- Heed the adage "When in Rome ..."
- Evolve, in a way
- Follow the advice "When in Rome ..."
- Change into something else
- Alter for a new use
- Adjust to suit
- Modify for usage
- Acclimatize
- Modify to suit
- Make suitable
- Adjust; conform
- Fit in
- Adjust oneself
- Make more suitable
- Emulate a chameleon
- Modify for use
- Adjust to new conditions
- Change accordingly
- Adjust to fit
- Learn to fit in
- Modify fittingly
- Adjust to changed circumstances
- Modify point in support of Australian lawyer
- Modify commercial apartment
- Modify a dwelling on return at end of August
- Make changes in plug fitting
- Change to suit a different purpose
- Change a lawyer gets with pint
- Old programmer goes to gym to get fit
- Adjust coverage of radar missing outer reaches of planet
- Become adjusted to new conditions
- Bring into harmony
- Change for the better
- Modify to one's needs
- Roll with the punches
- Change over time?
- Cope with change
- Keep up with the times
- Change to fit
- Rewrite for Hollywood
- Be flexible
- Modify appropriately
- Become acclimated
- Adjust accordingly
- Make it work
- Make adjustments
- Get to fit
- Suit yourself?
- Get used to new surroundings
- Change with the scenery
- Adjust to something new
- Adjust to changes
- Adjust to change
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Adapt \A*dapt"\, a.
Fitted; suited. [Obs.]
--Swift.
Adapt \A*dapt"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Adapted; p. pr. & vb. n. Adapting.] [L. adaptare; ad + aptare to fit; cf. F. adapter. See Apt, Adept.] To make suitable; to fit, or suit; to adjust; to alter so as to fit for a new use; -- sometimes followed by to or for.
For nature, always in the right,
To your decays adapts my sight.
--Swift.
Appeals adapted to his [man's] whole nature.
--Angus.
Streets ill adapted for the residence of wealthy
persons.
--Macaulay.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 15c. (implied in adapted) "to fit (something, for some purpose)," from Middle French adapter (14c.), from Latin adaptare "adjust," from ad- "to" (see ad-) + aptare "join," from aptus "fitted" (see apt). Meaning "to undergo modification so as to fit new circumstances" (intransitive) is from 1956. Related: Adapting.
Wiktionary
Adapted; fit; suited; suitable. v
1 (context transitive English) To make suitable; to make to correspond; to fit or suit; to proportion. 2 (context transitive English) To fit by alteration; to modify or remodel for a different purpose; to adjust: as, to adapt a story or a foreign play for the stage; to adapt an old machine to a new manufacture. 3 (context transitive English) To make by altering or fitting something else; to produce by change of form or character: as, to bring out a play adapted from the French; a word of an adapted form. 4 (context intransitive English) To change oneself so as to be adapted.
WordNet
v. make fit for, or change to suit a new purpose; "Adapt our native cuisine to the available food resources of the new country" [syn: accommodate]
adapt or conform oneself to new or different conditions; "We must adjust to the bad economic situation" [syn: adjust, conform]
Wikipedia
Adapt may refer to:
- ADAPT, American disability rights organisation
- ADAPT - Able Disable All People Together, disability organisation working for Neuro-Muscular and Developmental Disabilities in India since 1972.
- Adapt (album), 2004 Trace Bundy album
- Adapt : Why Success Always Starts with Failure, a book by Tim Harford
Adapt is a 2004 album by Trace Bundy. This 2-disc set includes a full-length studio CD and a full-feature live DVD; recorded live at Flatirons Theater, June 30, 2004.
Usage examples of "adapt".
My ship abuilding out in the construction orbits was human-designed and human-built, but most of the construction, and all of the drive and communications systems, were adapted from Heechee designs.
Congress States were entitled to enact legislation adapted to the local needs of interstate and foreign commerce, that a pilotage law was of this description, and was, accordingly, constitutionally applicable until Congress acted to the contrary to vessels engaged in the coasting trade.
When one views the intricacies of adaptation of the San in the Kalahari or the Inuit of the far north, it is apparent that the huge body of knowledge that enables these human cultures to adapt to such extremes was cultured over immense lengths of time.
This important plant holds the soils of riparian habitats and also creates fertile micro-climates, adapting its shape and behavior to the amount of moisture it can get and to the elevation in which it grows, which relates then to the temperature that it must endure.
Europe and North Africa, but not to North America, although it has shown high adaptation in adapting itself to conditions as found in the latter.
Whether natural selection has really thus acted in nature, in modifying and adapting the various forms of life to their several conditions and stations, must be judged of by the general tenour and balance of evidence given in the following chapters.
I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully adapting each form to the most complex relations of life.
It was a cold-blooded lottery that paid off often enough to be worthwhile adapting for.
Europe and thence to Asia and Africa, adapting and reshaping as they went.
They were gradually adapting to living off algae they strained out of seawater.
Separated bands of cousins went their diverging genetic ways, adapting to new challenges, discovering diverse techniques for living.
She had asked him about adapting it to work with a spear-thrower when Mamut came into the tent.
Most of the crew suffered from some degree of nausea while adapting to microgravity, and those especially affected, such as AH Tillman and Alex Dyachkov, are still prone to attacks if they spin around too quickly, or if they find themselves without an absolute reference point.
A large number of skilled engineers had already been brought from the fleet and were busily at work adapting the exterior industrial apparatus of the place to the purposes of an aeronautic park.
Perhaps not surprisingly, the norms of Aggressor guerrilla warfare were already adapted for instruction of Americans and their allies in real-world unconventional warfare in the 1950s.