embed

empotrar
definition
verb
he had an operation to remove a nail embedded in his chest
fix (an object) firmly and deeply in a surrounding mass.
The U.S. military's decision to embed journalists in combat units prompted me to think about the value of embedding reporters as a journalistic technique.
attach (a journalist) to a military unit during a conflict.
noun
most of the embeds found themselves covering construction and civil works projects
an embedded journalist.
translation of 'embed'
verb
enclavar,
hacer rodeos,
empotrar,
clavar,
incrustar
example
It is left to Martha Swann's rather ditzy Rosalind and Jenni Bowden's practical gentle and loving Celia to lighten the mood and 'embed' the ideas of fidelity and courage in love that run through the play.
But the biggest problem I faced as an 'embed' with the Marine grunts was that I found myself doing what journalists are warned from journalism school not to do: I found myself falling in love with my subject.
The flaw makes it possible for a website to 'embed' malicious code (including more Trojans, worms and/or viruses) directly into a web page, and infect visitors instantly while visiting the site.
The U.S. military's decision to 'embed' journalists in combat units prompted me to think about the value of embedding reporters as a journalistic technique.
Digital watermarking technology allows users to 'embed' a digital code in audio, images, video and printed documents that is imperceptible during normal use but readable by computers and software.
Here, the two main clauses are coordinated by but, the first main clause has a that clause within which is 'embedded' another that clause, and the second main clause also contains a that clause.
The U.S. war in Iraq began with an experiment, 'embedding' reporters with U.S. military units in the field.
The programs highlight the specific companies with which the journalists were 'embedded' .
The usual sorts of discourse relationships exist among the phrases, but very little of this structure is encoded by phrasal 'embedding' within sentences.
Now, four-fifths of Hydroid's AUV orders are for 'embedded' , integrated GPS systems.
The extensive training and concomitant understanding the 'embeds' received through the program, from boot camp to the day-to-day military routine, no doubt contributed to the quality of their coverage.
This morning MSNBC interviewed one of the producers from their news crew that visited al Qaqaa as 'embeds' with the 101st Airborne, Second brigade on April 10th, 2003.
The East Bay lab has been examining issues with low power 'embedded' devices designed for instrumentation such as industrial and environmental monitoring for several years.
The second significant criticism was that the 'embeds' failed ‘to give a sense of the war as a whole.’
At the same time, most of the literature related to experimental studies are to investigate the effect of shape, size, depth of 'embedment' etc in the laboratory.
Hirsh suffers from a kind of ‘Stockholm Syndrome,’ however, as one of the first journalists 'embedded' with a military unit.
Well, most of the reporters are 'embedded' with the Marines and the First Cavalry - one battalion in the First Cavalry.
If the public believes 'embedding' journalists is a way for the Pentagon to control the news rather than to report it, the Army will have gained nothing.
Dr Van de Velde hopes to design clothes with invisibly 'embedded' electronics capable of generating electric power from body heat or movement.
Introducing interactive learning technology is a contemporary case study of the difficulties involved in 'embedding' new ideas and new ways of working into institutions that are resistant to change.
A round 'embedded' itself in the nose cone, inches from where he was peering through his sights.
Deon's air tanks and the battery pack for his light appeared to be firmly 'embedded' in the mud underneath him, and Shaw was starting to pant from exertion.
As a result, many viewers felt that the front-line footage provided by 'embeds' was like watching a ‘war film’ rather than capturing the reality of war.
Lisa, there were some American women journalists who were 'embedded' with the military who knew what was going on firsthand.
A small microchip is 'embedded' into a debit or credit card and provides both highly secure memory and complex processing capabilities.
A microchip is 'embedded' into the credit or debit card.
Task Force Danger encouraged leaders and soldiers to talk to the press and routinely 'embedded' journalists and reporters with units.
Silicon and Software Systems designs chips for integrated circuits and 'embedded' software for clients in the electronics industry.
I mean tragedy in the classical sense in which the hero's misery is 'embedded' in his triumph.
Expect to see diagnostic devices 'embedded' into houses.
Credits: Google Translate