But assimilation and acculturation usually mean the erosion of the cultural and social life of the immigrant group. |
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It is said that the forced assimilation of native people to European-American values caused the degradation of Native American art. |
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There has been an increasing acknowledgment that assimilation could have a coercive element to it. |
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Strong kinship ties, proximity to places of origin, and the French language made the Quebecois resistant to assimilation. |
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Since acculturation is ultimately a personal choice, degrees of assimilation will vary from individual to individual. |
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These immigrant churches weathered acculturation and assimilation better than other immigrant institutions. |
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Take, for instance, this fragment of a 1978 study which mobilizes the concept of assimilation, a keyword in Franco-Ontarian politics. |
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And this, in turn, is nothing less than one of the most thoroughgoing instances of assimilation and reconsolidation in twentieth-century America. |
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Chapter 4 describes cases where coronals undergo assimilation but dorsals and labials do not. |
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The criticisms against bilingual education policy are myopic and focused on nostalgic notions of Americanization and assimilation. |
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Minorities, be they linguistic or religious, dread the assimilation as much as they fear exclusion. |
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He understood what the significance of an assimilation of Dewey to Freud might hold rhetorically within the realm of American cultural politics. |
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The reason we say we need that critical mass is the issue around assimilation. |
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Bee pollen is used to improve digestive assimilation as well as athletic performance. |
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Raw foods make optimal assimilation of nutrition easy and provide pure, clean energy for the body. |
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His knowledge came from assimilation and practical application, allegedly made easier by his aristocratic heritage. |
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The earlier that students are introduced to the software development process, the smoother the assimilation of this body of knowledge will be. |
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Despite his early assimilation of modernist methods, he has long been underappreciated. |
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One section is devoted to the assimilation and exploration of the philosophical and scientific heritage of late antiquity. |
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Concise text would reduce strain on military communications and greatly speed the assimilation of information. |
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Many who become generals have only one nonoperational assignment, which allows little time for reflection and assimilation of skills. |
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One interesting case is the assimilation of foreign cultures that took place in insular Southeast Asia. |
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There is nothing new about the assimilation of elements of popular culture into the fine arts. |
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This paved the way for multiculturalism, undermining the relevance of assimilation for many new immigrants. |
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Spanglish appears to confront immigrant fear and the compromises of assimilation. |
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Asylum seekers could enhance their image by accepting the necessity of certain cultural and linguistic assimilation with the host community. |
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In the new country, the former colonizer's country, a new cycle of forced and voluntary assimilation started all over again. |
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This availability of electrons represents another step in the regulation of sulfate assimilation in non-photosynthetic tissues. |
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This may result in smaller plants with a lower assimilation capacity and reduced yields. |
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This corresponds to the optimal distribution of leaf nitrogen that maximizes carbon assimilation and crop productivity. |
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This results in a smaller stimulation of photosynthetic assimilation at elevated levels of carbon dioxide. |
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Their approach assumed the observed, almost complete sugar assimilation to model gut function in hummingbirds. |
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Nitrate also acts as a signal to induce the expression of enzymes involved in nitrogen assimilation. |
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The nature of the grazing mayfly suggests selective feeding or assimilation of the more highly labeled algal-bacterial substance. |
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What was happening here was assimilation to the English model with its directly state-run Anglican Church. |
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The Enlightenment was the beginning of the gradual domestication of the doctrine, and its eventual assimilation to a secular understanding. |
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In order to comprehend the mechanisms of assimilation, some comprehension of the production of speech sounds is needed. |
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This may help reduce final consonant deletion, assimilation, and other phonological processes. |
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The vowel that causes the vowel assimilation is frequently termed the trigger. |
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It is thus not surprising that regulatory interactions between assimilatory sulphate and nitrate assimilation in plants were long established. |
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Clinicians need to balance new mainstream integration with sensitive assimilation of the hospice model to ensure seamless transition. |
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Language issues can be intimately linked with assimilation, as children sometimes reject both their Mayan language and customs. |
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They all come together not under the banner of assimilation or oneness, but of coexistence. |
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Their notion of identity means transposing the values of their own culture to here because they are afraid of integration and assimilation. |
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Instead they have refused assimilation and present themselves as the monistic alternative to the monism of Western modernity. |
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They tend to regard opposition to multiculturalism and attempts at assimilation as irrational prejudice or unjustifiable ethnocentrism. |
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The idea that such assimilation counteracts true independence doesn't occur to a 10-year-old immigrant smarty-pants. |
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These symbols of solidarity circumscribe the Amish world and bridle the forces of assimilation. |
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Ammonium is the reduced nitrogen form available to plants for assimilation into amino acids. |
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The intrusions are passively emplaced into the surrounding host by stoping and assimilation. |
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The argument over assimilation versus separation is at the heart of the matter. |
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Acculturation theory was partially supported by the finding that assimilation tendencies are linked to finding full employment. |
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An obvious, but often overlooked, fact about assimilation is that it can only occur once gay people have actually come out of the closet. |
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However, in spontaneous speech, inter-syllabic coarticulations usually take the form of regressive assimilation. |
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The movie is about cultural differences and the difficulties of assimilation. |
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Sadly it also seems that Indigenous people the world over share a collective experience of oppression, exploitation and assimilation. |
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In the 1930s, the Soviet government began policies of collectivization, education for all, and assimilation. |
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This perception is rent by contradictions between assimilation and separation, conservatism and liberalism, and tradition and progression. |
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In photosynthetic eukaryotic organisms, nitrate assimilation involves two membrane barriers, the plasma and the chloroplast membranes. |
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And these representations changed appreciably over the centuries, through a process of both contestation and assimilation. |
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As with the rest of Native Americans, the Inuit acculturation and assimilation patterns were more the result of coercion than choice. |
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The Pharisees' holiness approach protected Israelite culture from assimilation into the dominant Greco-Roman culture. |
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Sulphate assimilation is present in plants, algae, fungi, and many autotrophic prokaryotes. |
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The integration of reduced sulphur into the amino acid cysteine is a central step in the assimilation of inorganic sulphur. |
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The remaining processes that could account for the rapid depletion of riverine nitrate are denitrification and microbial assimilation. |
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We want figures who embody our feelings, represent a wise assimilation and a thoughtful new political response. |
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For assimilation was a condition of future rights, not a guarantee of them. |
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In aquatic systems these processes are two orders of magnitude slower than assimilation and dissimilation. |
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I could only surmise that these Makonde had taken Swahili names to ease their assimilation into coastal society, creating confusion among non-resident park officials. |
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This assimilation has been so successful that it is challenging to discover the ethnic antecedents of many families who have become completely Americanized. |
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During primary sulphate assimilation in chloroplasts, sulphate is reduced via sulphite to the organic sulphide which is used for cysteine biosynthesis. |
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Each candidate is supervised by a mentor as well as by a program leader in each division to facilitate a smooth assimilation into the company's culture. |
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Quite the contrary, assimilation and ethnic identification are two distinct poles of a dialectic process of reidentification that involves creative cultural crisscrossing. |
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As Aristotle states, knowledge is an assimilation to the thing known. |
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Participation aids concentration, retention, and assimilation of ideas. |
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Some black immigrants, who originally came to Canada to better themselves and have now achieved middle-class status, prefer assimilation over heritage. |
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The assimilation of knowledge always occurs within a definite dynamic. |
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They agreed that Indian assimilation was a supportable goal but believed that it should happen in a voluntary manner and at a deliberate speed without a specific timeline. |
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Inorganic nitrogen assimilation, in the form of ammonium, onto carbon skeletons for the production of amino acids is one of the most important biochemical processes in plants. |
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In the US mainland, the Filipino Americans' immediate location, colonial discourses are syncretized into a culture that advocates their assimilation. |
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Gas flow to the assimilation chamber was measured by a mass-flow controller, and gas was also bled off to serve as the reference gas for the CO 2 and humidity measurements. |
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The first level consists of tales that circulated primarily in unassimilated band and tribal societies, though the tales may have only been written down after assimilation. |
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Fecundity is affected mainly by the time that lizards experience suitably elevated body temperatures that maximize the net rate of energy assimilation. |
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Similarly, Jones defies an easy assimilation into civilian society. |
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It may also lead to the assimilation of folk deities with Vedic religion. |
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They settled all over Britain, becoming naturalised British citizens of the Roman Empire, erecting a wealth of inscriptions which attest to their assimilation and prosperity. |
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Plant adaptation to stress is mediated by multiple signalling pathways that allow the co-ordination of growth and primary assimilation processes in shoots and roots. |
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Equally tired is Duncan's assimilation and protection of a bumbling youth. |
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Actors can inhabit the person through the sheer force of their assimilation. |
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Today, Turkey in the German imagination has mostly to do with immigration, assimilation, and EU membership. |
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Like it or not, ethnicity, assimilation and wages are the same the currents that roil immigration. |
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The mainstream assimilation of countercultural values is no longer just a social phenomenon. |
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The flux of ammonium through the photorespiratory nitrogen cycle has been estimated to be 10 times higher than that resulting from primary assimilation. |
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A major concern of French Canadians today is the preservation of their culture and language against the threat of assimilation into English-speaking North America. |
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Although an amino acid acceptor of sulphide is necessary for sulphate assimilation, only little attention was paid to the regulation of S assimilation by carbon metabolites. |
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Our problems are rooted in centuries of U.S. government-imposed ethnocide and forced assimilation and the solutions must be as broad and deep as the problems. |
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Thirdly, the difference in institutional arrangements may influence immigrant assimilation. |
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Omophagy, ritual eating of raw flesh, is the assimilation and internalization of godhead. |
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In Scandinavia, there is a long history of assimilation of and by the Sami people and Finnic peoples, namely Finns and Karelians. |
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Effective assimilation of Chinese naval techniques allowed the Yuan army to quickly conquer the Song. |
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Mineral compositions vary as magmas evolve in sub-volcanic, lithospheric magma chambers by assimilation and differentiation. |
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Atlanto-occipital assimilation is failure of segmentation between the fourth occipital sclerotome and the first spinal sclerotome. |
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The focus in much of this work has been on the assimilation of the Manchus into Chinese society. |
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Judging from the autobiographical texts of these three authors, Natives often mixed assimilation with a degree of disassimilation. |
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We see it as part of other government strategies on assimilation and municipalising our communities. |
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The Huguenots adapted quickly and often married outside their immediate French communities, which led to their assimilation. |
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Migration and military expeditions led to the cultural assimilation of the south. |
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During this period most Xianbei people adopted Han surnames, eventually leading to complete assimilation into the Han. |
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The survival of the language is tenuous in many places, and has died out in many places where assimilation has occurred. |
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Tyer is a modern variation that is now commonly accepted in our world of fast and loose phrasing and new vocabulary assimilation. |
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Both breaking and retraction are fundamentally phenomena of assimilation to a following velar consonant. |
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Raising or lowering may be triggered by a nearby sound, in which case they are a form of assimilation, or they may occur on their own. |
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Thus, vowel breaking, in this restricted sense, can be viewed as an example of assimilation of a vowel to a following vowel or consonant. |
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The Durham Report subsequently recommended responsible government and the assimilation of French Canadians into English culture. |
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In English as in other languages, assimilation of adjacent consonants is common, particularly of a nasal with a following consonant. |
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The population mix changed over time by assimilation, and especially by migration. |
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The tribal and ethnic makeup changed over the centuries as a result of assimilation and, most importantly, migrations. |
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This triggered voicing assimilation, so that t appeared whenever the preceding stem ended in a voiceless consonant. |
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It also involved the destruction, enslavement, or assimilation of other groups of early people who did not make such a transition. |
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For the purpose of improving assimilation of titanium and nitrogen, deoxidizing of the metal was performed in two stages. |
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In the case of the Latin American communities, the danger of extinction is also due to the risk of assimilation by modern Castilian. |
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The theoretical origins of learning via concept mapping can be related back to constructivism, assimilation, and associationist theories. |
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Wonder of Wonders approaches the topic of assimilation from many angles. |
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Such assimilation would have been facilitated if, as is possible, the Bastarnae spoke an East Germanic language closely related to Gothic. |
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Seeing itself as an inclusive nation with universal values, France has always valued and strongly advocated assimilation. |
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However, the success of such assimilation has recently been called into question. |
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Another example of an allophone is assimilation, wherein a phoneme is to sound more like the other phoneme. |
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Research shows that country of origin matters for speed and depth of immigrant assimilation but that there is considerable assimilation overall. |
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B's moniker and Andre 3000-style flow with hero worship or ATL assimilation. |
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Cultural assimilation is the process by which a person's or group's culture come to resemble those of another group. |
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Cultural assimilation may involve either a quick or gradual change depending on circumstances of the group. |
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Full assimilation occurs when new members of a society become indistinguishable from members of the other group. |
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By taking account of ethnic attrition, the assimilation rate of Hispanics in the United States improves significantly. |
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The term assimilation is often used with regard to immigrants and various ethnic groups who have settled in a new land. |
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Cotner contests Macan's view that progressive rock cannot exist without the continuous and overt assimilation of classical music into rock. |
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Some scholars also believed assimilation and acculturation were synonymous. |
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This is a process of assimilation which may be voluntary or may be forced upon a population. |
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For all its somewhat ahistorical idealism, the melting-pot metaphor still represents the standard around which fervent proponents of assimilation have rallied over the years. |
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They are affixed to the verbs as enclitics, causing in some circumstances the assimilation of the final consonant of the verbal base to the enclitic. |
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The noninitial clusters are normally homorganic due to assimilation. |
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But no matter where gay people establish roots, Prang says they can't forget the places that nurtured them from the start, and made assimilation possible. |
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English settlers, in turn, solidly repressed berdachism in North America, although a score of nineteenth-century texts reveal a lack of sexual assimilation. |
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The oscillating strategies of annihilation, exclusionary containment, and assimilation with respect to Native Americans provide but one very poignant case and point. |
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This quite likely contributed to their linguistic assimilation. |
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Through conquest and assimilation, it came to dominate the Mediterranean region and then Western Europe, Asia Minor, North Africa, and parts of Northern and Eastern Europe. |
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This means that successful cases of assimilation will be underestimated. |
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Simultaneously France renounced the assimilation of immigrants, where they were expected to adhere to French traditional values and cultural norms. |
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Until the early 19th century, a policy of forced assimilation was employed by the Swedish government in what until then had been a linguistically Danish region. |
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In Korean, geminates arise from assimilation, and they are distinctive. |
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During the years of forced assimilation, the areas in which reindeer herding was an important livelihood were among the few where the Sami culture and language survived. |
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Still, due to the cultural assimilation of the Sami people that had occurred in the four countries over the centuries, population estimates are difficult to measure precisely. |
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Many Sami do not speak any of the Sami languages any more due to historical assimilation policies, so the number of Sami living in each area is much higher. |
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Cultural assimilation can happen either spontaneously or forcibly. |
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Assimilation had various meanings in American sociology, Henry Pratt Fairchild associates American assimilation with Americanization or the melting pot theory. |
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Secondly, the size of new gateways may influence immigrant assimilation. |
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Finally, Waters and Jimenez have only speculated that these differences may influence immigrant assimilation and the way researchers should assess immigrant assimilation. |
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Negative responses to minorities within the nation state have ranged from cultural assimilation enforced by the state, to expulsion, persecution, violence, and extermination. |
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This chapter is followed by Harold Sullivan's case study of the dynamics of regional development and assimilation using the marchland of South-East Ulster as his model. |
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In some cases, palatalization involves assimilation or lenition. |
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The artist views the creative experience as numinous and believes it can be transformed through the interaction with and assimilation of the archetypal images and energies. |
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A number of factors can exacerbate the loss of tradition, including industrialization, globalization, and the assimilation or marginalization of specific cultural groups. |
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Their disc is a perfectly judged assimilation of Bach and the blues which builds up quite a head of steam once Milt Jackson gets his vibraharp into overdrive. |
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The French adopted a policy of assimilation rather than association. |
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Among the sources are assimilation, compensatory lengthening, stress, sonority, the optimization of syllable contacts, and spontaneous gemination in proparoxytones. |
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The discussion in the article is about assimilation and an affricative daleth and in the footnote Morgenstern is suddenly talking about the elision of a fricative daleth. |
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He admits that powdered alicorn will delay the death of a poisoned pigeon, but says that any other horn will do the same thing by retarding assimilation. |
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