/ɪmˈbɛd/, /ɛmˈbɛd/
- transitiveTo lay (something) as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed.
“to embed something in clay, mortar, or sand”
“To the man himself [Samuel Taylor Coleridge] Nature had given, in high measure, the seeds of a noble endowment; […] but imbedded in such weak laxity of character, in such indolences and esuriences as ”
“I have given my reasons for believing that … ; and that blank intervals of vast duration, as far as fossils are concerned, occurred during the periods when the bed of the sea was either stationary or ”
- broadly, transitiveTo include (something) in surrounding matter.
“We wanted to embed our reporter with the Fifth Infantry Division, but the Army would have none of it.”
“After some unnecessary, producer-pleasing expository text, he opens the movie in close-up on the back of a camo combat helmet Sharpied in Vietnam-style graffiti, effectively embedding the viewer with ”
- transitiveTo encapsulate within another document or data file.
“The instructions showed how to embed a chart from the spreadsheet within the wordprocessor document.”
- transitiveTo define a one-to-one function from one set to another so that certain properties of the domain are preserved when considering the image as a subset of the codomain.
“The torus S¹#92;timesS¹ can be embedded in #92;mathbb#123;R#125;³.”
- An embedded reporter or journalist, such as a war reporter assigned to and travelling with a military unit, or a political reporter assigned to follow and report on the campaign of a candidate.
- An element of an advertisement, etc. serving as a subliminal message.
“He alleges that ads for Seagram's gin, Chivas Regal scotch, Bacardi rum, Sprite soda, Camel and Kent cigarettes, Tweed perfume, Kanon cologne and myriad other products include embeds surreptitiously p”
- A digital object embedded within another, which is often a document.
“When you change the content of these embeds, this information will be automatically updated in every page that the embeds are included in.”
“Adding controls, looping, and autoplay to an HTML5 video embed is simple.”
- A piece of computer hardware embedded within another physical object, which is often a larger IT device.
Formsembeds(present, singular, third-person) · embedding(participle, present) · embedded(participle, past) · embedded(past) · imbed(alternative) · embeds(plural)