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    Ab·sorb
    /əbˈzôrb/

    verb

  2. To absorb is to take in or suck up like a sponge. If you don't hear your mother calling because you are reading, you could say you were absorbed in the book. If your parents buy groceries for a party you are throwing and don't make you pay, you could say that they decided to absorb the cost of the food.

  3. to understand and remember facts that you read or hear: It's hard to absorb so much information. absorb verb [T] (BECOME PART OF) B2. If something is absorbed into something else, it becomes part of it: The drug is quickly absorbed into the bloodstream. (Definition of absorb from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  4. absorb something to use up a large supply of something, especially money or time. The new proposals would absorb $80 billion of the federal budget. My work absorbs a great deal of my time. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. absorb something to deal with changes, effects, costs, etc.

  5. 2 days ago · verb (transitive) 1. to soak or suck up (liquids) 2. to engage or occupy (the interest, attention, or time) of (someone); engross. 3. to receive or take in (the energy of an impact ) 4. physics. to take in (all or part of incident radiated energy) and retain the part that is not reflected or transmitted.

  6. 1 to take in a liquid, gas, or other substance from the surface or space around absorb something Plants absorb oxygen. Let the rice cook until it has absorbed all the water. absorb something into something The lotion is easily absorbed into the skin.

  7. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English absorb /əbˈsɔːb, əbˈzɔːb $ -ɔːrb/ W3 verb [ transitive] 1 liquid/gas to take in liquid, gas, or another substance from the surface or space around something Plants absorb nutrients from the soil. absorb something into something Water and salts are absorbed into our bloodstream. 2 information t...

  8. 1. To take (something) in through or as through pores or interstices. 2. a. To occupy the attention, interest, or time of; engross: The problem completely absorbed her. See Synonyms at engross. b. To take up or occupy (one's time or interest, for example). 3. To retain (radiation or sound, for example) wholly, without reflection or transmission. 4.

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