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Adopted Adopt Child Policy Verb Bre əˈdɒpt əˈdɑːpt

Word adopt
WordType (verb)
Phonetic BrE / əˈdɒpt / NAmE / əˈdɑːpt /
Example
  • a campaign to encourage childless couples to adopt
  • to adopt a child
  • she was forced to have her baby adopted.
  • all three teams adopted different approaches to the problem.
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adopt

(verb)BrE / əˈdɒpt / NAmE / əˈdɑːpt /
  1. to take somebody else’s child into your family and become its legal parent(s)
    • compare foster
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/foster_1
    • a campaign to encourage childless couples to adopt
    • to adopt a child
    • She was forced to have her baby adopted.
  2. to start to use a particular method or to show a particular attitude towards somebody/something
    • All three teams adopted different approaches to the problem.
  3. to formally accept a suggestion or policy by voting
    • to adopt a resolution
    • The council is expected to adopt the new policy at its next meeting.
  4. to choose a new name, a country, a custom, etc. and begin to use it as your own
    • to adopt a name/title/language
    • Early Christians in Europe adopted many of the practices of the older, pagan religions.
  5. to use a particular manner, way of speaking, expression, etc.
    • He adopted an air of indifference.
  6. to choose somebody as a candidate in an election or as a representative
    • She was adopted as parliamentary candidate for Wood Green.

    Extra Examples

    • We would like to adopt a child.
    • He adopted the dress and manners of an Englishman.
    • She adopted an air of indifference.
    • The child has now been legally adopted.
    • The couple adopted two children.
    • The female adopts a more passive role than the male.
    • The government adopted a resolution on disarmament.
    • The new manager adopted a very autocratic style.
    • The party adopted its current name in 1965.
    • The policy has not yet been formally adopted.
    • We could not agree on the best methods to adopt.
    • What position do you adopt on this issue?
    • the policies employers adopt towards the labour force
    • He smiled and adopted a more casual tone of voice.
    • The people adopted him as their patron saint.
    • The royal family adopted the name of Windsor early in the last century.

    Verb Forms

    • present simple I / you / we / they adopt
    • he / she / it adopts
    • past simple adopted
    • past participle adopted
    • -ing form adopting

    Word Origin

    • late 15th cent.: via French from Latin adoptare, from ad- ‘to’ + optare ‘choose’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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