embed

ٹویٹ ایمبیڈ
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.
example
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.
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 second significant criticism was that the 'embeds' failed ‘to give a sense of the war as a whole.’
The pellet punctured the intestine in two places and 'embedded' itself in the unfortunate animal's spleen.
He responded to the modern dilemma of human reason failing to produce ethical consensus by arguing that ideas are never pure: they are always 'embedded' in social contexts.
Many 'embeds' remain, and their reports are excellent, but most of our news coverage now has returned to what has gone wrong and who's at fault, and antiwar activists again dominate ‘breaking news.’
Central to this was ensuring that the 600 journalists to be 'embedded' with the military played their role.
What is remarkable is that the bottle is firmly 'embedded' in a solid rock-like mass.
Did any one else see the not-so-subtle difference between the reports from the 'embeds' vs the roving reporters?
He seems to think that the ‘good news’ coverage of the 2003 invasion of Iraq resulted from having many embedded reporters but that the gloomy coverage since then somehow results from a lack of 'embeds' .
Task Force Danger encouraged leaders and soldiers to talk to the press and routinely 'embedded' journalists and reporters with units.
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.
On the other hand, implanting a powerful one-size-fits-all 'embedded' microprocessor can reduce battery life to worthless levels.
Although she never had had any claim to him, predatory feelings were deeply 'embedded' within her heart.
The sound of which completely obscured the revving car engine; I only realized there was a vehicle heading towards me when it crashed through the trees and 'embedded' itself in the garage wall.
The company has 'embedded' a device in some of its watches that enables the wearer to load admission tickets.
In Japan, the permanent 'embedment' of acupuncture needles in the musculature represents a common acupunctural technique to relieve pain.
Nostalgia is 'embedded' in the geography of the place.
Imagine how much easier it would be to reorder parts using a system that automatically queries 'embedded' chips every few minutes and accounts for parts as they are used.
Revolutionary messianism, fanaticism, is the only way to disrupt one's 'embedment' in a system whose hegemony is so thoroughly entrenched.
Such was the power of the impact, one of the bricks 'embedded' itself in the passenger door.
The only exceptions are journalists 'embedded' with US military units, a practice that many fear skews the reporting of the war.
I mean tragedy in the classical sense in which the hero's misery is 'embedded' in his triumph.
Just because some futurist says that ‘everyone’ will soon be wearing clothing 'embedded' with a location device does not make that a trend.
The Journal, for instance, wove together coverage from 'embeds' , from the Pentagon's briefing centers in Qatar and Washington and unilaterals converging from numerous directions.
Look at the way journalists were 'embedded' during the conflict, folded into the media management operation.
Cheap microprocessors are now 'embedded' in everything from gas pumps to oil fryers.
Credits: Google Translate