embracement

Alternative forms

 * imbracement

Etymology

 * equivalent to.

Noun

 * 1) A clasp in the arms; embrace.
 * 2) * 1932,, London: Chatto & Windus, Chapter 11,
 * Five bus-loads of boys and girls, singing or in a silent embracement, rolled past them over the vitrified highway.
 * 1) State of embracing, encompassing or including various items; inclusion.
 * 2) Act or state of embracing or accepting; willing acceptance.
 * 3) * 1994, Robert Alun Jones, Durkheim’s Imperative: “The Role of Humanities Faculty in the Information Technologies Revolution” in Brett Sutton (editor), Literary Texts in an Electronic Age: Scholarly Implications and Library Services, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, p. 175,
 * I believe that it is this moral dimension of the division of intellectual labor that leads many of us to feel discomfort as we survey the detritus of our traditional roles, the havoc provoked by our attraction to and embracement of these powerful technologies.
 * 1) State of being contained; enclosure.
 * 1) * 1994, Robert Alun Jones, Durkheim’s Imperative: “The Role of Humanities Faculty in the Information Technologies Revolution” in Brett Sutton (editor), Literary Texts in an Electronic Age: Scholarly Implications and Library Services, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, p. 175,
 * I believe that it is this moral dimension of the division of intellectual labor that leads many of us to feel discomfort as we survey the detritus of our traditional roles, the havoc provoked by our attraction to and embracement of these powerful technologies.
 * 1) State of being contained; enclosure.
 * I believe that it is this moral dimension of the division of intellectual labor that leads many of us to feel discomfort as we survey the detritus of our traditional roles, the havoc provoked by our attraction to and embracement of these powerful technologies.
 * 1) State of being contained; enclosure.