Definition of Incorporative in English :

Define Incorporative in English

Incorporative meaning in English

Meaning of Incorporative in English

Pronunciation of Incorporative in English

Incorporative pronunciation in English

Pronounce Incorporative in English

Incorporative

see synonyms of incorporative

Adjective

1. incorporative

growing by taking over and incorporating adjacent territories

Example Sentences:
'the Russian Empire was a typical incorporative state'

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Incorporative

see synonyms of incorporative
verb (ɪnˈkɔːpəˌreɪt )
1. 
to include or be included as a part or member of a united whole
2. 
to form or cause to form a united whole or mass; merge or blend
3. 
to form (individuals, an unincorporated enterprise, etc) into a corporation or other organization with a separate legal identity from that of its owners or members
adjective (ɪnˈkɔːpərɪt , -prɪt)
4. 
combined into a whole; incorporated
5. 
formed into or constituted as a corporation
adjective
an archaic word for incorporeal

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Incorporative

see synonyms of incorporative
adjective
1. 
incorporate1 verb transitive
verb transitiveWord forms: inˈcorpoˌrated or inˈcorpoˌrating
2. 
to combine or join with something already formed; make part of another thing; include; embody
3. 
to bring together into a single whole; merge
4. 
to admit into a corporation or association as a member
5. 
to form (individuals or units) into a legally organized group that acts as one individual; form into a corporation
6. 
to give substantial, material, or physical form to
verb intransitive
7. 
to unite or combine into a single whole; be combined or merged
8. 
to form a corporation
adjective
Archaic
incorporeal

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.


Incorporative

see synonyms of incorporative
v. in·cor·po·rat·ed, in·cor·po·rat·ing, in·cor·po·rates
v.tr.
1. To unite (one thing) with something else already in existence: incorporated the letter into her diary.
2. To admit as a member to a corporation or similar organization.
3. To cause to merge or combine together into a united whole.
4. To cause to form into a legal corporation: incorporate a business.
5. To give substance or material form to; embody.
v.intr.
1. To become united or combined into an organized body.
2. To become or form a legal corporation: San Antonio incorporated as a city in 1837.
3. Linguistics To move from the head of one phrase to the head of another, forming a new word by affixing onto that head, as in certain languages when a noun object of a verb is affixed to the verb.
adj. (-pər-ĭt)
1. Combined into one united body; merged.
2. Formed into a legal corporation.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.