subsume

Etymology
, from. Compare.

Verb

 * 1) To place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include or contain something else.
 * 2) * March 14, 2018, Roger Penrose writing in The Guardian, 'Mind over matter': Stephen Hawking – obituary
 * A few years later (in a paper published by the Royal Society in 1970, by which time Hawking had become a fellow “for distinction in science” of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge), he and I joined forces to publish an even more powerful theorem which subsumed almost all the work in this area that had gone before.
 * 1) * 1961: J. A. Philip. Mimesis in the Sophistês of Plato. In: Proceedings and Transactions of the American Philological Association 92. p. 453--468.
 * no allusion is made to forms because Plato is subsuming under the class of productive crafts both divine and human imitation;
 * 1) To consider an occurrence as part of a principle or rule; to colligate.

Related terms

 * subsumation
 * subsumption

Translations

 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Dutch:, plaatsen in
 * Finnish:, , subsumoida
 * French: ,
 * German:, , , ,
 * Greek: ,
 * Irish: fo-ghlac
 * Italian:, ,
 * Portuguese:, ,
 * Russian: включа́ть в какую-л. категорию
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: подво̀дити, укључи́вати
 * Roman: ,
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Turkish:, , , ,


 * Bulgarian: отнасям към
 * Dutch: ,
 * Finnish:, subsumoida
 * French:, ,
 * German: ,
 * Spanish: