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  1. Dictionary
    Col·o·nize
    /ˈkäləˌnīz/

    verb

    • 1. (of a country or its citizens) send a group of settlers to (a place) and establish political control over it: "the Greeks colonized Sicily and southern Italy"
  2. To colonize is to settle in, and take control of, land outside your own borders. Usually, a large, powerful country colonizes a territory or area that's much less powerful. There are many examples through history of powerful countries that colonized various regions of the world in order to gain natural resources or to obtain more land for their ...

  3. recolonize. [ I or T ] (of animals, plants, or bacteria) to start to live or grow in a particular area: The beetles colonize a tree, tunneling through the bark to lay eggs. The ceilings of the caves had been colonized by bats. Left alone, domestic cats quickly colonize, breed and become wild.

  4. colonize. colonize something to take control of an area or a country that is not your own, especially using force, and send people from your own country to live there. The area was colonized by the Vikings. colonize something (biology) (of animals or plants) to live or grow in large numbers in a particular area.

  5. 1 day ago · 1. to send colonists to or establish a colony in (an area) 2. to settle in (an area) as colonists. 3. (transitive) to transform (a community) into a colony. 4. (of plants and animals) to become established in (a new environment ) Collins English Dictionary.

  6. 1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) to send colonists to or establish a colony in (an area) 2. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) to settle in (an area) as colonists. 3. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) ( tr) to transform (a community) into a colony. 4. (Environmental Science) (of plants and animals) to become established in (a new environment)

  7. to compel or induce (people) to settle in an area for economic or political purposes: The government made efforts to colonize laborers and their families in areas suitable for growing rice. Biology . (of a species of plant or animal) to move or be transported to (a new habitat) and seek to become established there: Arthropods were the first ...

  8. 1. : to create a colony in or on (a place) : to take control of (an area) and send people to live there. England colonized Australia. The area was colonized in the 18th century. 2. : to move into and live in (a place) as a new type of plant or animal. Weeds quickly colonized the field.

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