Crossword clues for incorporate
incorporate
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Incorporate \In*cor"po*rate\, a. [L. incorporatus. See In- not, and Corporate.]
-
Not consisting of matter; not having a material body; incorporeal; spiritual.
Moses forbore to speak of angles, and things invisible, and incorporate.
--Sir W. Raleigh. Not incorporated; not existing as a corporation; as, an incorporate banking association.
Incorporate \In*cor"po*rate\, a. [L. incorporatus, p. p. of incorporare to incorporate; pref. in- in + corporare to make into a body. See Corporate.] Corporate; incorporated; made one body, or united in one body; associated; mixed together; combined; embodied.
As if our hands, our sides, voices, and minds
Had been incorporate.
--Shak.
A fifteenth part of silver incorporate with gold.
--Bacon.
Incorporate \In*cor"po*rate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Incorporated; p. pr. & vb. n. Incorporating.]
-
To form into a body; to combine, as different ingredients, into one consistent mass.
By your leaves, you shall not stay alone, Till holy church incorporate two in one.
--Shak. -
To unite with a material body; to give a material form to; to embody.
The idolaters, who worshiped their images as gods, supposed some spirit to be incorporated therein.
--Bp. Stillingfleet. To unite with, or introduce into, a mass already formed; as, to incorporate copper with silver; -- used with with and into.
-
To unite intimately; to blend; to assimilate; to combine into a structure or organization, whether material or mental; as, to incorporate provinces into the realm; to incorporate another's ideas into one's work.
The Romans did not subdue a country to put the inhabitants to fire and sword, but to incorporate them into their own community.
--Addison. To form into a legal body, or body politic; to constitute into a corporation recognized by law, with special functions, rights, duties and liabilities; as, to incorporate a bank, a railroad company, a city or town, etc.
Incorporate \In*cor"po*rate\, v. i. To unite in one body so as to make a part of it; to be mixed or blended; -- usually followed by with.
Painters' colors and ashes do better incorporate will
oil.
--Bacon.
He never suffers wrong so long to grow,
And to incorporate with right so far
As it might come to seem the same in show.
--Daniel.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 14c., "to put (something) into the body or substance of (something else)," from Late Latin incorporatus, past participle of incorporare "unite into one body," from Latin in- "into, in, on, upon" (see in- (2)) + corpus (genitive corporis) "body" (see corporeal). Meaning "to legally form a body politic" is from 1460s. Related: Incorporated; incorporating.
Wiktionary
1 (context obsolete English) Corporate; incorporated; made one body, or united in one body; associated; mixed together; combined; embodied. 2 Not consisting of matter; not having a material body; incorporeal; spiritual. 3 Not incorporated; not existing as a corporation. v
1 (context transitive English) To include (something) as a part. 2 (context transitive English) To mix (something in) as an ingredient; to blend 3 (context transitive English) To admit as a member of a company 4 (context transitive English) To form into a legal company. 5 (context US legal English) To include (another clause or guarantee of the US constitution) as a part (of the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteenth%20Amendment%20to%20the%20United%20States%20Constitution, such that the clause binds not only the federal government but also state governments). 6 To form into a body; to combine, as different ingredients, into one consistent mass. 7 To unite with a material body; to give a material form to; to embody.
WordNet
v. make into a whole or make part of a whole; "She incorporated his suggestions into her proposal" [syn: integrate] [ant: disintegrate]
include or contain; have as a component; "A totally new idea is comprised in this paper"; "The record contains many old songs from the 1930's" [syn: contain, comprise]
form a corporation
unite or merge with something already in existence; "incorporate this document with those pertaining to the same case"
adj. formed or united into a whole [syn: incorporated, integrated, merged, unified]
Usage examples of "incorporate".
State, as a condition of doing business within its jurisdiction, may exact a license tax from a telegraph company, a large part of whose business is the transmission of messages from one State to another and between the United States and foreign countries, and which is invested with the powers and privileges conferred by the act of Congress passed July 24, 1866, and other acts incorporated in Title LXV of the Revised Statutes?
With this the publishers desired to incorporate a chapter giving the latest views of Agassiz upon classification and evolution.
He had entertained the idea of incorporating the asteroid occupants into his own staff, reckoning on their antiestablishment tendencies.
If you incorporate the boat under Bahamian law as a charter company, there are all sorts of tax tricks.
A third incorporated the actual drill and baseplate for the shot-hole.
Its stock incorporated a semiwide beavertailHe paused in his mental recitation of the Tac Ops catalog description to peer at the weapon, not quite sure what a beavertail was.
Selected biochemic tissue-salts are incorporated in a smooth nongreasy, colourless base.
It was to be called Cardiff Stores Incorporated and the president of this new organization was to be none other than Rex Cardiff.
The presence of the NVG likely increased the search space for new business models, and it incorporated many desirable attributes of VC into the commercialization of Bell Labs technologies.
I used them as collateral to pump the stock of the Orlando Coria Mining and Bright Matter Company, Incorporated.
As he reached lower energy-levels, he cut out the screen altogether and went to look in on Daleth Incorporated who had made no sound for two hours.
They do their part and do it well, but the brains of the machine are up in the little office and are all incorporated in the despatcher on duty.
Although Esperanto is international in the narrow sense that it incorporates features of more than one national language, it in no way meets the criteria for a global language.
But, in the ecclesiastical doctrine of hell, prevalent in Christendom, we see the full equivalents of the baseless fancies and superstitions incorporated in these other doctrines.
Mahnmut knew, incorporated visualizations of radio frequencies and magnetic field lines, neither common to old-style humans, which made a lot more sense for a moravec working in the hard radiation fields of Galilean space.