- verbabsorb (verb) · absorbs (third person present) · absorbed (past tense) · absorbed (past participle) · absorbing (present participle)
- take in or soak up (energy or a liquid or other substance) by chemical or physical action:"buildings can be designed to absorb and retain heat" · "steroids are absorbed into the bloodstream"
- take in and understand fully (information, ideas, or experience):"she absorbed the information in silence"
- take control of (a smaller or less powerful entity) and make it a part of a larger one:"the family firm was absorbed into a larger group"
- use or take up (time or resources):"arms spending absorbs roughly two percent of the national income"
- take up and reduce the effect or intensity of (sound or an impact):"deep-pile carpets absorbed all sound of the outside world"
- (be absorbed in)take up the attention of (someone); interest greatly:"she sat in an armchair, absorbed in a book" · "the work absorbed him and continued to make him happy"
Originlate Middle English: from Latin absorbere, from ab- ‘from’ + sorbere ‘suck in’.Similar and Opposite Wordsverb- take in or soak up (energy or a liquid or other substance) by chemical or physical action:
- take in and understand fully (information, ideas, or experience):
- take control of (a smaller or less powerful entity) and make it a part of a larger one:
- use or take up (time or resources):
- take up and reduce the effect or intensity of (sound or an impact):
- take up the attention of (someone); interest greatly:
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- Absorb can mean1234:
- To be fully involved in something.
- To take in without echo, recoil, or reflection.
- To take something in, especially gradually.
- To take in knowledge, attitudes, etc.
Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.◊ If you are absorbed in something, you are fully involved in it. She was (completely) absorbed in [= lost in] thought. He quickly found himself absorbed in [= engrossed by] the movie.www.britannica.com/dictionary/absorbto take in without echo, recoil, or reflection: to absorb sound and light; to absorb shock. to take in and utilize: The market absorbed all the computers we could build.www.dictionary.com/browse/absorbto take something in, especially gradually:dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/absorb: to take in (knowledge, attitudes, etc.) : acquire, learnwww.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/absorb Absorb Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
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