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Definitions

embracive

[em-brey-siv] / ɛmˈbreɪ sɪv /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Milley faced accusations this past week by Republicans in Congress that he was far too "woke" and embracive of "critical race theory."

From Salon

“The genius of our Constitution is that this concept of ‘We the people’ has become ever more embracive,” she told a reverential crowd of 1,400 that greeted and sent off Ginsburg with standing ovations.

From Washington Post

I suspect that Ms. Schneemann might agree with his view, which offers yet another explanation of why she continues to stand in “a zone corresponding to the art world’s blind-spot” as she has put it, which gives an excellent reason to give her embracive, karmically corrective art a permanent place on center-stage.

From New York Times

Yet those realities have rubbed up against the far more embracive stance of many Germans, who have seen it as something of a national duty to help the suffering newcomers.

From Washington Post

The tale of Partenopex de Blois certainly deserves fuller study at the hands of folklorists than it has yet received, and I hope they will peruse its Catalonian as well as its French form, thus rendering their purview of the tale more embracive.

From Project Gutenberg