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embodied
[ em-bod-eed ]
adjective
- expressed, personified, or exemplified in concrete form:
The one-day intensive workshop is designed to shift peacemaking from words and theory to costly, embodied reality.
- having or provided with a body; incarnate or corporeal:
In most folklore, ghosts seem to be bound by many of the same physical laws that bind embodied beings.
- Environmental Science. relating to or being the energy involved or required in the production, maintenance, or use of a particular concrete object, and therefore thought of as part of the object:
You can increase the embodied efficiency of a new house by building it in an already dense neighborhood, taking advantage of existing infrastructure and shorter distances.
- (of writing) portraying the details of bodily experience as they are lived or relived by the writer so as to evoke them sympathetically in the reader:
Acting out your characters is something I recommend as part of the enlivening practice of embodied writing.
verb
- the simple past tense and past participle of embody ( def ).
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ·É±ð±ô±ô-±ð³¾Â·²ú´Ç»å·¾±±ð»å adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of embodied1
Example Sentences
No one has embodied that sentiment this season more than Smith.
But Caselotti didn’t just reference her character in her everyday life . . . she embodied her entire ethos.
Abraham, adopting a dignified clown demeanor, has an embodied theatricality that is well suited to Beckett’s style.
“People want something that gives them a sense of embodied spirituality and cacao is so gentle, you can’t even say there are side effects.â€
The Washington Post said she “embodied the Quiet Storm a full decade before it became a successful radio format†and NPR credited her with being one of the “prime revisionists of the American songbook.â€
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